diff --git a/template.go b/template.go index 7520f6f..7044f8b 100644 --- a/template.go +++ b/template.go @@ -341,8 +341,42 @@ func writeDebianGbpConf(dir string, dep14, pristineTar bool) error { fmt.Fprintf(f, "dist = DEP14\n") } if pristineTar { - fmt.Fprintf(f, "pristine-tar = True\n") - } + fmt.Fprintf(f, ` +# Enable pristine-tar to exactly reproduce orig tarballs +pristine-tar = True + +`) + } + + // Additional text to the template which is useful for 99% of the go packages + fmt.Fprint(f, ` +# Lax requirement to use branch name 'debian/latest' so that git-buildpackage +# will always build using the currently checked out branch as the Debian branch. +# This makes it easier for contributors to work with feature and bugfix +# branches. +ignore-branch = True + +# The Debian packaging git repository may also host actual upstream tags and +# branches, typically named 'main' or 'master'. Configure the upstream tag +# format below, so that 'gbp import-orig' will run correctly, and link tarball +# import branch ('upstream/latest') with the equivalent upstream release tag, +# showing a complete audit trail of what upstream released and what was imported +# into Debian. +# +# TODO: Most Go packages have tags of form 'v1.0.0', but must be double-checked. +upstream-vcs-tag = v%(version%~%-)s + +# If upstream publishes tarball signatures, git-buildpackage will by default +# import and use the them. Change this to 'on' to make 'gbp import-orig' abort +# if the signature is not found or is not valid. +# +# Most Go packages don't publish signatures for the tarball releases, so this is +# not enabled by default. +#upstream-signatures = on + +# Ensure the Debian maintainer signs git tags automatically. +sign-tags = True +`) return nil }