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NAME

       hawkey - Hawkey Documentation

       Contents:

API CHANGES

   ContentsAPI ChangesIntroductionChanges in 0.2.10Python bindingsChanges in 0.2.11Python bindingsChanges in 0.3.0CoreQuery: key for reponame filteringRepo initializationQuery installs obsoletedPython bindingsQuery: filtering by repository with the reponame keyPackage: removed methods for direct EVR comparisonRepo initializationQuery installs obsoletedChanges in 0.3.1Query: hy_query_filter_package_in() takes a new parameterRemoved hy_query_filter_obsoleting()Changes in 0.3.2Removed hy_packagelist_of_obsoletes.Changes in 0.3.3Renamed hy_package_get_nvra to hy_package_get_nevraChanges in 0.3.4Python bindingspkg.__repr__() is more verbose nowChanges in 0.3.8CoreNew parameter rootdir to hy_sack_create()Python bindingsForms recognized by Subject are no longer an instance-scope settingChanges in 0.3.9CoreFlags for hy_sack_createhy_sack_get_cache_path is renamed to hy_sack_get_cache_dirPython bindingsmake_cache_dir for Sack's constructorcache_path property of Sack renamed to cache_dirChanges in 0.3.11Corehy_goal_package_obsoletes() removed, hy_goal_list_obsoleted_by_package() provided insteadhy_goal_list_erasures() does not report obsoletesPython bindingsChanges in 0.4.5CoreQuery: hy_query_filter_latest() now filter latest packages ignoring architecturePython bindingsChanges in 0.4.13CoreDeprecated hy_package_get_update_*Changes in 0.4.15Corehy_goal_write_debugdata() takes a directory parameterPython bindingsGoal.write_debugdata() takes a directory parameterPackage: string attributes are represented by Unicode objectChanges in 0.4.18CoreDeprecated hy_advisory_get_filenamesPython bindingsRepo() does not accept cost keyword argumentDeprecated _hawkey.Advisory.filenamesChanges in 0.4.19Python bindingsAdvisory attributes in UnicodeChanges in 0.5.2Corehy_chksum_str returns NULLChanges in 0.5.3CoreNew parameter logfile to hy_sack_create()Deprecated hy_create_cmdline_repo()Python bindingsNew optional parameter logfile to Sack constructorcache_path property of Sack renamed to cache_dirDeprecated Sack method create_cmdline_repo()Changes in 0.5.4Python bindingsGoal: install() takes a new optional parameterChanges in 0.5.5CoreRenamed hy_sack_load_yum_repo to hy_sack_load_repoPython bindingsSack method load_yum_repo has been renamed to Sack.load_repo()Changes in 0.5.7Python bindingsPackage: file attribute is represented by list of Unicode objectsSack: list_arches method returns list of Unicode objectsChanges in 0.5.9CoreDeprecated  hy_goal_req_has_distupgrade(),  hy_goal_req_has_erase() and hy_goal_req_has_upgrade()
               functionsPython bindingsDeprecated    Goal    methods    Goal.req_has_distupgrade_all(),     Goal.req_has_erase()     and
               Goal.req_has_upgrade_all()Changes in 0.6.2CorePython bindingsAdvisory: The filename property is removed along with the C API

   Introduction
       This  document  describes  the  API changes the library users should be aware of before upgrading to each
       respective version. It is our plan to have the amount of changes requiring changing the client code go to
       a minimum after the library hits the 1.0.0 version.

       Depracated API items (classes, methods, etc.) are designated as such in this document. The first  release
       where  support for such items can be dropped entirely must be issued at least five months after the issue
       of the release that announced the deprecation and at the same time have, relatively  to  the  deprecating
       release, either:

       • a higher major version number, or

       • a higher minor version number, or

       • a patchlevel number that is by at least five greater.

       These criteria are likely to tighten in the future as hawkey matures.

       Actual  changes  in the API are then announced in this document as well. ABI changes including changes in
       functions' parameter counts or types or removal of public symbols from libhawkey imply an increase in the
       library's SONAME version.

   Changes in 0.2.10
   Python bindings
       Query.filter() now returns a new instance of Query, the same as  the  original  with  the  new  filtering
       applied.  This  allows for greater flexibility handling the Query objects and resembles the way QuerySets
       behave in Django.

       In practice the following code will stop working as expected:

          q = hawkey.Query(self.sack)
          q.filter(name__eq="flying")
          # processing the query ...

       It needs to be changed to:

          q = hawkey.Query(self.sack)
          q = q.filter(name__eq="flying")
          # processing the query ...

       The original semantics is now available via the Query.filterm() method, so the following will also work:

          q = hawkey.Query(self.sack)
          q.filterm(name__eq="flying")
          # processing the query ...

   Changes in 0.2.11
   Python bindings
       In Python's Package instances accessors for string attributes now return None instead of the empty string
       if the attribute is missing (for instance a pkg.sourcerpm now returns None if pkg is a source rpm package
       already).

       This change is towards a more conventional Python practice. Also, this leaves  the  empty  string  return
       value free to be used when it is actually the case.

   Changes in 0.3.0
   Core
   Query: key for reponame filtering
       The Query key value used for filtering by the repo name is HY_PKG_REPONAME now (was HY_PKG_REPO). The old
       value was misleading.

   Repo initialization
       hy_repo_create() for Repo object initialization now needs to be passed a name of the repository.

   Query installs obsoleted
       All Goal methods accepting Query as the means of selecting packages, such as hy_goal_install_query() have
       been  replaced  with  their  Selector  counterparts.  Selector  structures  have  been introduced for the
       particular purpose of specifying a package that best matches the given criteria and at the same  time  is
       suitable for installation. For a discussion of this decision see Selectors are not Queries.

   Python bindings
   Query: filtering by repository with the reponame key
       Similar change happened in Python, the following constructs:

          q = q.filter(repo="updates")

       need to be changed to:

          q = q.filter(reponame="updates")

       The  old  version  of this didn't allow using the same string to both construct the query and dynamically
       get the reponame attribute from the returned packages (used e.g.  in  DNF  to  search  by  user-specified
       criteria).

   Package: removed methods for direct EVR comparison
       The following will no longer work:

          if pkg.evr_eq(some_other_pkg):
              ...

       Instead use the result of pkg.evr_cmp, for instance:

          if pkg.evr_cmp(some_other_pkg) == 0:
              ...

       This  function  compares  only  the  EVR  part  of a package, not the name. Since it rarely make sense to
       compare versions of packages of different names, the following is suggested:

          if pkg == some_other_pkg:
              ...

   Repo initialization
       All instantiations of hawkey.Repo now must be given the name of the Repo. The following will now fail:

          r = hawkey.Repo()
          r.name = "fedora"

       Use this instead:

          r = hawkey.Repo("fedora")

   Query installs obsoleted
       See Query installs obsoleted in the C section. In Python Queries will  no  longer  work  as  goal  target
       specifiers, the following will fail:

          q = hawkey.Query(sack)
          q.filter(name="gimp")
          goal.install(query=q)

       Instead use:

          sltr = hawkey.Selector(sack)
          sltr.set(name="gimp")
          goal.install(select=sltr)

       Or a convenience notation:

          goal.install(name="gimp")

   Changes in 0.3.1
   Query: hy_query_filter_package_in() takes a new parameter
       keyname  parameter  was added to the function signature. The new parameter allows filtering by a specific
       relation to the resulting packages, for instance:

          hy_query_filter_package_in(q, HY_PKG_OBSOLETES, HY_EQ, pset)

       only leaves the packages obsoleting a package in pset a part of the result.

   Removed hy_query_filter_obsoleting()
       The new version of hy_query_filter_package_in() handles this now, see above.

       In Python, the following is no longer supported:

          q = query.filter(obsoleting=1)

       The equivalent new syntax is:

          installed = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(reponame=SYSTEM_REPO_NAME)
          q = query.filter(obsoletes=installed)

   Changes in 0.3.2
   Removed hy_packagelist_of_obsoletes.
       The function was not systematic. Same result is achieved by obtaining obsoleting reldeps from  a  package
       and then trying to find the installed packages that provide it. In Python:

          q = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(reponame=SYSTEM_REPO_NAME, provides=pkg.obsoletes)

   Changes in 0.3.3
   Renamed hy_package_get_nvra to hy_package_get_nevra
       The  old name was by error, the functionality has not changed: this function has always returned the full
       NEVRA, skipping the epoch part when it's 0.

   Changes in 0.3.4
   Python bindings
   pkg.__repr__() is more verbose now
       Previously, repr(pkg) would yield for  instance  <_hawkey.Package  object,  id:  5>.  Now  more  complete
       information  is  present,  including  the  package's  NEVRA  and repository: <hawkey.Package object id 5,
       foo-2-9\.noarch, @System>.

       Also notice that the representation now mentions the final hawkey.Package type, not _hawkey.Package. Note
       that these are currently the same.

   Changes in 0.3.8
   Core
   New parameter rootdir to hy_sack_create()
       hy_sack_create() now accepts third argument, rootdir. This can  be  used  to  tell  Hawkey  that  we  are
       intending  to  do  transactions in a changeroot, not in the current root. It effectively makes use of the
       RPM database found under rootdir. To make your code compile  in  0.3.8  without  changing  functionality,
       change:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch);

       to:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch, NULL);

   Python bindings
   Forms recognized by Subject are no longer an instance-scope setting
       It  became necessary to differentiate between the default forms used by subject.nevra_possibilities() and
       subject.nevra_possibilities_real(). Therefore there is little sense in setting the default  form  for  an
       entire Subject instance. The following code:

          subj = hawkey.Subject("input", form=hawkey.FORM_NEVRA)
          result = list(subj.nevra_possibilities())

       is thus replaced by:

          subj = hawkey.Subject("input")
          result = list(subj.nevra_possibilities(form=hawkey.FORM_NEVRA))

   Changes in 0.3.9
   Core
   Flags for hy_sack_create
       hy_sack_create()  now accepts fourth argument, flags, introduced to modify the sack behavior with boolean
       flags. Currently only one flag is supported, HY_MAKE_CACHE_DIR, which causes the cache  directory  to  be
       created if it doesn't exist yet. To preserve the previous behavior, change the following:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch, rootdir);

       into:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch, rootdir, HY_MAKE_CACHE_DIR);

   hy_sack_get_cache_path is renamed to hy_sack_get_cache_dir
       Update your code by mechanically replacing the name.

   Python bindings
   make_cache_dir for Sack's constructor
       A  new  sack  by  default  no  longer automatically creates the cache directory. To get the old behavior,
       append make_cache_dir=True to the Sack.__init__() arguments, that is change the following:

          sack = hawkey.Sack(...)

       to:

          sack = hawkey.Sack(..., make_cache_dir=True)

   cache_path property of Sack renamed to cache_dir
       Reflects the similar change in C API.

   Changes in 0.3.11
   Core
   hy_goal_package_obsoletes() removed, hy_goal_list_obsoleted_by_package() provided instead
       hy_goal_package_obsoletes() was flawed in that it only returned a single obsoleted package  (in  general,
       package  can  obsolete  arbitrary number of packages and upgrade a package of the same name which is also
       reported as an obsolete). Use hy_goal_list_obsoleted_by_package() instead, to see  the  complete  set  of
       packages that inclusion of the given package in an RPM transaction will cause to be removed.

   hy_goal_list_erasures() does not report obsoletes
       In other words, hy_goal_list_erasures() and hy_goal_list_obsoleted() return disjoint sets.

   Python bindings
       Directly reflecting the core changes. In particular, instead of:

          obsoleted_pkg = goal.package_obsoletes(pkg)

       use:

          obsoleted = goal.obsoleted_by_package(pkg) # list
          obsoleted_pkg = obsoleted[0]

   Changes in 0.4.5
   Core
   Query: hy_query_filter_latest() now filter latest packages ignoring architecture
       For old function behavior use new function hy_query_filter_latest_per_arch()

   Python bindings
       In  Python's  Query  option  latest  in  Query.filter()  now  filter  only  the  latest packages ignoring
       architecture. The original semantics for filtering latest packages for each arch  is  now  available  via
       latest_per_arch option.

       For example there are these packages in sack:

          glibc-2.17-4.fc19.x86_64
          glibc-2.16-24.fc18.x86_64
          glibc-2.16-24.fc18.i686

          >>> q = hawkey.Query(self.sack).filter(name="glibc")
          >>> map(str, q.filter(latest=True))
          ['glibc-2.17-4.fc19.x86_64']

          >>> map(str, q.filter(latest_per_arch=True))
          ['glibc-2.17-4.fc19.x86_64', 'glibc-2.16-24.fc18.i686']

   Changes in 0.4.13
   Core
   Deprecated hy_package_get_update_*
       The  functions  were  deprecated  because there can be multiple advisories referring to a single package.
       Please use the new function hy_package_get_advisories() which returns all these advisories. New functions
       hy_advisory_get_* provide the data retrieved by the deprecated functions.

       The only exception is the hy_package_get_update_severity() which will be dropped without any replacement.
       However advisory types and severity levels are distinguished from now and  the  type  is  accessible  via
       hy_advisory_get_type().   Thus  enum HyUpdateSeverity was also deprecated. A new HyAdvisoryType should be
       used instead.

       The old functions will be dropped after 2014-07-07.

   Changes in 0.4.15
   Core
   hy_goal_write_debugdata() takes a directory parameter
       hy_goal_write_debugdata() has a new const char *dir argument to communicate the target directory for  the
       debugging data. The old call:

          hy_goal_write_debugdata(goal);

       should be changed to achieve the same behavior to:

          hy_goal_write_debugdata(goal, "./debugdata");

   Python bindings
   Goal.write_debugdata() takes a directory parameter
       Analogous to core changes.

   Package: string attributes are represented by Unicode object
       Attributes  baseurl,  location,  sourcerpm,  version,  release,  name,  arch,  description, evr, license,
       packager, reponame, summary and url of Package object return Unicode string.

   Changes in 0.4.18
   Core
   Deprecated hy_advisory_get_filenames
       The function was deprecated because we need more information about packages listed in  an  advisory  than
       just   file   names.   Please  use  the  new  function  hy_advisory_get_packages()  in  combination  with
       hy_advisorypkg_get_string() to obtain the data originally provided by the deprecated function.

       The old function will be dropped after 2014-10-15 AND no sooner than in 0.4.21.

   Python bindings
   Repo() does not accept cost keyword argument
       Instead of:

          r = hawkey.Repo('name', cost=30)

       use:

          r = hawkey.Repo('name')
          r.cost = 30

       Also previously when no cost was given it defaulted to 1000. Now the default is  0.  Both  these  aspects
       were present by mistake and the new interface is consistent with the C library.

   Deprecated _hawkey.Advisory.filenames
       The  attribute  was  deprecated because the underlying C function was also deprecated. Please use the new
       attribute packages and the attribute filename of the returned  objects  to  obtain  the  data  originally
       provided by the deprecated attribute.

       The old attribute will be dropped after 2014-10-15 AND no sooner than in 0.4.21.

   Changes in 0.4.19
   Python bindings
   Advisory attributes in Unicode
       All string attributes of Advisory and AdvisoryRef objects (except the deprecated filenames attribute) are
       Unicode objects now.

   Changes in 0.5.2
   Core
   hy_chksum_str returns NULL
       Previously,  the  function hy_chksum_str would cause a segmentation fault when it was used with incorrect
       type value. Now it correctly returns NULL if type parameter  does  not  correspond  to  any  of  expected
       values.

   Changes in 0.5.3
   Core
   New parameter logfile to hy_sack_create()
       hy_sack_create()  now  accepts  fifth argument, logfile to customize log file path.  If NULL parameter as
       logfile is given, then all debug records are written to hawkey.log in cachedir. To make your code compile
       in 0.5.3 without changing functionality, change:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch, rootdir, 0);

       to:

          HySack sack = hy_sack_create(cachedir, arch, rootdir, NULL, 0);

   Deprecated hy_create_cmdline_repo()
       The function will be removed since hy_add_cmdline_package creates cmdline repository automatically.

       The function will be dropped after 2015-06-23 AND no sooner than in 0.5.8.

   Python bindings
   New optional parameter logfile to Sack constructor
       This addition lets user specify log file path from Sack.__init__()

   cache_path property of Sack renamed to cache_dir
       This change was already announced but it actually never happened.

   Deprecated Sack method create_cmdline_repo()
       The method will be removed since Sack.add_cmdline_package() creates cmdline repository automatically.

       The method will be dropped after 2015-06-23 AND no sooner than in 0.5.8.

   Changes in 0.5.4
   Python bindings
   Goal: install() takes a new optional parameter
       If the optional parameter is set to True, hawkey silently skips packages that can not be installed.

   Changes in 0.5.5
   Core
   Renamed hy_sack_load_yum_repo to hy_sack_load_repo
       Hawkey is package manager agnostic and the yum phrase could be misleading.

       The function will be dropped after 2015-10-27 AND no sooner than in 0.5.8.

   Python bindings
   Sack method load_yum_repo has been renamed to Sack.load_repo()
       Hawkey is package manager agnostic and the yum phrase could be misleading.

       The method will be dropped after 2015-10-27 AND no sooner than in 0.5.8.

   Changes in 0.5.7
   Python bindings
   Package: file attribute is represented by list of Unicode objects
   Sack: list_arches method returns list of Unicode objects
   Changes in 0.5.9
   Core
   Deprecated hy_goal_req_has_distupgrade(), hy_goal_req_has_erase() and hy_goal_req_has_upgrade() functions
       To make your code compile in 0.5.9 without changing functionality, change:

          hy_goal_req_has_distupgrade_all(goal)
          hy_goal_req_has_erase(goal)
          hy_goal_req_has_upgrade_all(goal)

       to:

          hy_goal_has_actions(goal, HY_DISTUPGRADE_ALL)
          hy_goal_has_actions(goal, HY_ERASE)
          hy_goal_has_actions(goal, HY_UPGRADE_ALL)

       respectively

   Python bindings
   Deprecated Goal methods Goal.req_has_distupgrade_all(), Goal.req_has_erase() and Goal.req_has_upgrade_all()
       To make your code compatible with hawkey 0.5.9 without changing functionality, change:

          goal.req_has_distupgrade_all()
          goal.req_has_erase()
          goal.req_has_upgrade_all()

       to:

          goal.actions & hawkey.DISTUPGRADE_ALL
          goal.actions & hawkey.ERASE
          goal.actions & hawkey.UPGRADE_ALL

       respectively

   Changes in 0.6.2
   Core
       The hy_advisory_get_filenames() API call, the corresponding Python property filenames of  class  Advisory
       are  removed.   Instead,  iterate  over  hy_advisory_get_packages()  with hy_advisorypkg_get_string() and
       HY_ADVISORYPKG_FILENAME.  No known hawkey API consumers were using this call.

       Hawkey now has a dependency on GLib.  Aside from the above hy_advisory_get_filenames() call,  the  Python
       API  is  fully  preserved.   The  C API has minor changes, but the goal is to avoid causing a significant
       amount of porting work for existing consumers.

       The hy_package_get_files API call now returns a char **, allocated via g_malloc.  Free with g_strfreev.

       The HyStringArray type is removed, as nothing now uses it.

       HyPackageList is now just a GPtrArray, though the existing API is converted into wrappers.  Notably, this
       means you can now use g_ptr_array_unref().

   Python bindings
       Aside from the one change below, the Python bindings should be unaffected by the C API changes.

   Advisory: The filename property is removed along with the C API

FAQ

   ContentsFAQGetting StartedHow do I build it?Are there examples using hawkey?Using HawkeyHow do I obtain the repo metadata files to feed to Hawkey?Why is a tool to do the downloads not integrated into Hawkey?

   Getting Started
   How do I build it?
       See the README.

   Are there examples using hawkey?
       Yes, look at:

       • unit testsThe Hawkey Testing Hack

       • a more complex example is DNF, the Yum fork using hawkey for backend.

   Using Hawkey
   How do I obtain the repo metadata files to feed to Hawkey?
       It is entirely up to you. Hawkey does not provide any means to do this automatically, for  instance  from
       your  /etc/yum.repos.d configuration. Use or build tools to do that. For instance, both Yum and DNF deals
       with the same problem and inside they employ urlgrabber to fetch the files. A  general  solution  if  you
       work  in  C is for instance libcurl.  If you are building a nice downloading library that integrates well
       with hawkey, let us know.

   Why is a tool to do the downloads not integrated into Hawkey?
       Because downloading things from remote servers is a differnt domain full of  its  own  complexities  like
       HTTPS, parallel downloads, error handling and error recovery to name a few. Downloading is a concern that
       can be naturally separated from other parts of package metadata managing.

PYTHON-HAWKEY TUTORIAL

   Contentspython-hawkey TutorialSetupThe Sack ObjectLoading RPMDBLoading RepositoriesCase for Loading the FilelistsBuilding and Reusing the Repo CacheQueriesResolving things with GoalsSelector Installs

       IMPORTANT:
          Please  consult every usage of the library with python-hawkey Reference Manual to be sure what are you
          doing. The examples mentioned here are supposed to be as simple as possible and may ignore some  minor
          corner cases.

   Setup
       First of, make sure hawkey is installed on your system, this should work from your terminal:

          >>> import hawkey

   The Sack Object
       Sack  is  an abstraction for a collection of packages. Sacks in hawkey are toplevel objects carrying much
       of hawkey's of functionality. You'll want to create one:

          >>> sack = hawkey.Sack()
          >>> len(sack)
          0

       Initially, the sack contains no packages.

   Loading RPMDB
       hawkey is a lib for listing, querying and resolving dependencies of packages from repositories.  On  most
       linux  distributions you always have at least the system repo (in Fedora it is the RPM database). To load
       it:

          >>> sack.load_system_repo()
          >>> len(sack)
          1683

       Hawkey  always  knows  the  name  of  every  repository.  The  system  repository  is   always   set   to
       hawkey.SYSTEM_REPO_NAME. and the client is responsible for naming the available repository metadata.

   Loading Repositories
       Let's be honest here: all the fun in packaging comes from packages you haven't installed yet. Information
       about them, their metadata, can be obtained from different sources and typically they are downloaded from
       an  HTTP  mirror  (another possibilities are FTP server, NFS mount, DVD distribution media, etc.). Hawkey
       does not provide any means to discover and obtain the metadata locally: it is up to the client to provide
       valid readable paths to the repository metadata XML files. Structures used for passing the information to
       hawkey  are  the  hawkey  Repos.  Suppose  we  somehow  obtained  the   metadata   and   placed   it   in
       /home/akozumpl/tmp/repodata. We can then load the metadata into hawkey:

          >>> path = "/home/akozumpl/tmp/repodata/%s"
          >>> repo = hawkey.Repo("experimental")
          >>> repo.repomd_fn = path % "repomd.xml"
          >>> repo.primary_fn = path % "f7753a2636cc89d70e8aaa1f3c08413ab78462ca9f48fd55daf6dedf9ab0d5db-primary.xml.gz"
          >>> repo.filelists_fn = path % "0261e25e8411f4f5e930a70fa249b8afd5e86bb9087d7739b55be64b76d8a7f6-filelists.xml.gz"
          >>> sack.load_repo(repo, load_filelists=True)
          >>> len(sack)
          1685

       The  number  of packages in the Sack will increase by the number of packages found in the repository (two
       in this case, it is an experimental repo after all).

   Case for Loading the Filelists
       What the load_filelists=True argument to load_repo()  above  does  is  instruct  hawkey  to  process  the
       <hash>filelists.xml.gz  file  we  passed  in  and which contains structured list of absolute paths to all
       files of all packages within the repo. This information can be used for two purposes:

       • Finding   a    package    providing    given    file.    For    instance,    you    need    the    file
         /usr/share/man/man3/fprintf.3.gz  which  is  not  installed.  Consulting filelists (directly or through
         hawkey) can reveal the file is in the man-pages package.

       • Depsolving. Some packages require concrete files as their dependencies. To know if these are resolvable
         and how, the solver needs to know what package provides what files.

       Some files provided by a package (e.g those in /usr/bin) are always  visible  even  without  loading  the
       filelists.  Well-behaved packages requiring only those can be thus resolved directly. Unortunately, there
       are packages that don't behave and it is hard to tell in advance when you'll deal with one.

       The strategy for using load_filelists=True is thus:

       • Use it if you know you'll do resolving (i.e. you'll use Goal).

       • Use it if you know you'll be trying to match files to their packages.

       • Use it if you are not sure.

   Building and Reusing the Repo Cache
       Internally to hold the package information and perform canonical resolving hawkey uses Libsolv. One great
       benefit this library offers is providing writing and reading of metadata cache  files  in  libsolv's  own
       binary  format  (files with .solv extension, typically). At a cost of few hundreds of milliseconds, using
       the solv files reduces repo load times from seconds to tens of milliseconds. It is thus a  good  idea  to
       write and use the solv files every time you plan to use the same repo for more than one Sack (which is at
       least  every  time  your  hawkey  program  is  run). To do that use build_cache=True with load_repo() and
       load_system_repo():

          >>> sack = hawkey.Sack(make_cache_dir=True)
          >>> sack.load_system_repo(build_cache=True)

       By default, Hawkey creates @System.cache under the /var/tmp/hawkey-<your_login>-<random_hash>  directory.
       This  is  the  hawkey cache directory, which you can always delete later (deleting the cache files in the
       process). The .solv files are picked up automatically the next time you try  to  create  a  hawkey  sack.
       Except for a much higher speed of the operation this will be completely transparent to you:

       >>> s2 = hawkey.Sack()
       >>> s2.load_system_repo()

       By the way, the cache directory (if not set otherwise) also contains a logfile with some boring debugging
       information.

   Queries
       Query  is  the  means  in  hawkey  of  finding  a  package  based on one or more criteria (name, version,
       repository of origin). Its interface is loosely based on Django's QuerySets, the main concepts being:

       • a fresh Query object matches all packages in the Sack and the selection is gradually narrowed  down  by
         calls to Query.filter()

       • applying  a  Query.filter() does not start to evaluate the Query, i.e. the Query is lazy. Query is only
         evaluated when we explicitly tell it to or when we start to iterate it.

       • use Python keyword arguments to Query.filter() to specify the filtering criteria.

       For instance, let's say I want to find all installed packages which name ends with gtk:

          >>> q = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(reponame=hawkey.SYSTEM_REPO_NAME, name__glob='*gtk')
          >>> for pkg in q:
          ...     print str(pkg)
          ...
          NetworkManager-gtk-1:0.9.4.0-9.git20120521.fc17.x86_64
          authconfig-gtk-6.2.1-1.fc17.x86_64
          clutter-gtk-1.2.0-1.fc17.x86_64
          libchamplain-gtk-0.12.2-1.fc17.x86_64
          libreport-gtk-2.0.10-3.fc17.x86_64
          pinentry-gtk-0.8.1-6.fc17.x86_64
          python-slip-gtk-0.2.20-2.fc17.noarch
          transmission-gtk-2.50-2.fc17.x86_64
          usermode-gtk-1.109-1.fc17.x86_64
          webkitgtk-1.8.1-2.fc17.x86_64
          xdg-user-dirs-gtk-0.9-1.fc17.x86_64

       Or I want to find the latest version of all python packages the Sack knows of:

          >>> q.clear()
          >>> q = q.filter(name='python', latest_per_arch=True)
          >>> for pkg in q:
          ...     print str(pkg)
          ...
          python-2.7.3-6.fc17.x86_64

       You can also test a Query for its truth value. It will be true whenever the query matched  at  least  one
       package:

          >>> q = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(file='/boot/vmlinuz-3.3.4-5.fc17.x86_64')
          >>> if q:
          ...     print 'match'
          ...
          match
          >>> q = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(file='/booty/vmlinuz-3.3.4-5.fc17.x86_64')
          >>> if q:
          ...     print 'match'
          ...
          >>> if not q:
          ...     print 'no match'
          ...
          no match

       NOTE:
          If  the Query hasn't been evaluated already then it is evaluated whenever it's length is taken (either
          via len(q) or q.count()), when it is tested for  truth  and  when  it  is  explicitly  evaluated  with
          q.run().

   Resolving things with Goals
       Many  Sack  sessions  culminate in a bout of dependency resolving, that is answering a question along the
       lines of "I have a package X in a repository here, what other packages do I  need  to  install/update  to
       have X installed and all its dependencies recursively satisfied?" Suppose we want to install the RTS game
       Spring. First let's locate the latest version of the package in repositories:

          >>> q = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(name='spring', latest_per_arch=True)
          >>> pkg = hawkey.Query(sack).filter(name='spring', latest_per_arch=True)[0]
          >>> str(pkg)
          'spring-88.0-2.fc17.x86_64'
          >>> pkg.reponame
          'fedora'

       Then  build  the  Goal  object and tell it our goal is installing the pkg. Then we fire off the libsolv's
       dependency resolver by running the goal:

          >>> g = hawkey.Goal(sack)
          >>> g.install(pkg)
          >>> g.run()
          True

       True as a return value here indicates that libsolv could find a solution to our goal. This is not  always
       the  case,  there are plenty of situations when there is no solution, the most common one being a package
       should be installed but one of its dependencies is missing from the sack.

       The three methods Goal.list_installs(), Goal.list_upgrades()  and  Goal.list_erasures()  can  show  which
       packages  should  be  installed/upgraded/erased  to satisfy the packaging goal we set out to achieve (the
       mapping of str() over the results below ensures human readable  package  names  instead  of  numbers  are
       presented):

          >>> map(str, g.list_installs())
          ['spring-88.0-2.fc17.x86_64', 'spring-installer-20090316-10.fc17.x86_64', 'springlobby-0.139-3.fc17.x86_64', 'spring-maps-default-0.1-8.fc17.noarch', 'wxBase-2.8.12-4.fc17.x86_64', 'wxGTK-2.8.12-4.fc17.x86_64', 'rb_libtorrent-0.15.9-1.fc17.x86_64', 'GeoIP-1.4.8-2.1.fc17.x86_64']
          >>> map(str, g.list_upgrades())
          []
          >>> map(str, g.list_erasures())
          []

       So  what  does  it  tell us? That given the state of the given system and the given repository we used, 8
       packages need to be installed, spring-88.0-2.fc17.x86_64 itself included. No packages need to be upgraded
       or erased.

   Selector Installs
       For certain simple and commonly used queries we can do installs directly. Instead of  executing  a  query
       however we instantiate and pass the Goal.install() method a Selector:

       >>> g = hawkey.Goal(sack)
       >>> sltr = hawkey.Selector(sack).set(name='emacs-nox')
       >>> g.install(select=sltr)
       >>> g.run()
       True
       >>> map(str, g.list_installs())
       ['spring-88.0-2.fc17.x86_64', 'spring-installer-20090316-10.fc17.x86_64', 'springlobby-0.139-3.fc17.x86_64', 'spring-maps-default-0.1-8.fc17.noarch', 'wxBase-2.8.12-4.fc17.x86_64', 'wxGTK-2.8.12-4.fc17.x86_64', 'rb_libtorrent-0.15.9-1.fc17.x86_64', 'GeoIP-1.4.8-2.1.fc17.x86_64']
       >>> len(g.list_upgrades())
       0
       >>> len(g.list_erasures())
       0

       Notice  we  arrived  at  the same result as before, when a query was constructed and iterated first. What
       Selector does when passed to Goal.install() is tell hawkey to examine its settings and without evaluating
       it as a Query it instructs  libsolv  to  find  the  best  matching  package  for  it  and  add  that  for
       installation.  It  saves  user some decisions like which version should be installed or what architecture
       (this gets very relevant with multiarch libraries).

       So Selectors usually only install a single package. If you mean  to  install  all  packages  matching  an
       arbitrarily complex query, just use the method describe above:

          >>> map(goal.install, q)

PYTHON-HAWKEY REFERENCE MANUAL

   Contentspython-hawkey Reference ManualIntroductionContents

   Introduction
       This reference manual describes Python API to the library. For a quick start take a look at python-hawkey
       Tutorial. To be sure that you are familiar with our deprecation policy, see API Changes.

       NOTE:
          The  API  consists of exactly those elements described in this document, items not documented here can
          change from release to release. Opening a bugzilla if certain needed functionality is not  exposed  is
          the right thing to do.

       WARNING:
          The manual is not complete yet - the features are being added incrementally these days.

   Contents
       API Documentation Contents

   Sack---The fundamental hawkey structure
       class hawkey.Sack
              Instances  of  hawkey.Sack  represent  collections  of packages. An application typically needs at
              least one instance because it provides much of the hawkey's functionality.

              WARNING:
                 Any  package  instance  is  not  supposed  to  work   interchangeably   between   hawkey.Query,
                 hawkey.Selector  or  hawkey.Goal  created  from different hawkey.Sack. Usually for common tasks
                 there is no need to initialize two or more Sacks in  your  program.   Sacks  cannot  be  deeply
                 copied.

              cache_dir
                     A  read-only  string  property  giving  the  path to the location where a metadata cache is
                     stored.

              installonly
                     A write-only sequence of strings property setting the provide names of packages that should
                     only ever be installed, never upgraded.

              installonly_limit
                     A write-only integer property setting how many installonly packages with the same name  are
                     allowed to be installed concurrently. If 0, any number of packages can be installed.

              __init__(cachedir=_CACHEDIR, arch=_ARCH, rootdir=_ROOTDIR, pkgcls=hawkey.Package, pkginitval=None,
              make_cache_dir=False, logfile=_LOGFILE)
                     Initialize  the sack with a default cache directory, log file location set to hawkey.log in
                     the cache directory, an automatically detected architecture and the current root (/) as  an
                     installroot. The cache is disabled by default.

                     cachedir is a string giving a path of a cache location.

                     arch is a string specifying an architecture.

                     rootdir is a string giving a path to an installroot.

                     pkgcls  is  a  class  of  packages retrieved from the sack. The class' __init__ method must
                     accept two arguments. The first argument is a tuple of the sack and the ID of the  package.
                     The  second  argument  is  the  pkginitval argument. pkginitval cannot be None if pkgcls is
                     specified.

                     make_cache_dir is a boolean that specifies whether the cache  should  be  used  to  speedup
                     loading of repositories or not (see Building and Reusing the Repo Cache).

                     logfile is a string giving a path of a log file location.

              __len__()
                     Returns the number of the packages loaded into the sack.

              add_cmdline_package(filename)
                     Add  a  package  to  a command line repository and return it. The package is specified as a
                     string filename of an RPM file. The command line repository will be  automatically  created
                     if doesn't exist already. It could be referenced later by hawkey.CMDLINE_REPO_NAME name.

              add_excludes(packages)
                     Add a sequence of packages that cannot be fetched by Queries nor Selectors.

              add_includes(packages)
                     Add a sequence of the only packages that can be fetched by Queries or Selectors.

                     This  is  the  inverse operation of add_excludes(). Any package that is not in the union of
                     all the included packages is excluded. This works in conjunction with exclude  and  doesn't
                     override  it.  So,  if  you  both  include  and  exclude  the  same package, the package is
                     considered excluded no matter of the order.

              disable_repo(name)
                     Disable the repository identified by a string name. Packages in that repository  cannot  be
                     fetched by Queries nor Selectors.

              enable_repo(name)
                     Enable  the  repository  identified  by  a  string name. Packages in that repository can be
                     fetched by Queries or Selectors.

              WARNING:
                 Execution of add_excludes(), add_includes(),  disable_repo()  or  enable_repo()  methods  could
                 cause  inconsistent  results in previously evaluated Query, Selector or Goal. The rule of thumb
                 is to exclude/include packages,  enable/disable  repositories  at  first  and  then  do  actual
                 computing using Query, Selector or Goal. For more details see developer discussion.

              evr_cmp(evr1, evr2)
                     Compare  two EVR strings and return a negative integer if evr1 < evr2, zero if evr1 == evr2
                     or a positive integer if evr1 > evr2.

              get_running_kernel()
                     Detect and return the package of the currently running kernel. If  the  package  cannot  be
                     found, None is returned.

              list_arches()
                     List strings giving all the supported architectures.

              load_system_repo(repo=None, build_cache=False)
                     Load  the  information about the packages in the system repository (in Fedora it is the RPM
                     database) into the sack. This makes the dependency solving aware of the  already  installed
                     packages.  The  system repository is always set to hawkey.SYSTEM_REPO_NAME. The information
                     is not written to the cache by default.

                     repo is an optional Repo object that  represents  the  system  repository.  The  object  is
                     updated during the loading.

                     build_cache  is  a  boolean that specifies whether the information should be written to the
                     cache (see Building and Reusing the Repo Cache).

              load_repo(repo, build_cache=False, load_filelists=False, load_presto=False, load_updateinfo=False)
                     Load the information about the packages in a Repo into the sack.  This makes the dependency
                     solving aware of these packages. The information is not written to the cache by default.

                     repo is the Repo object to be processed. At least its Repo.repomd_fn must be  set.  If  the
                     cache  has to be updated, Repo.primary_fn is needed too. Some information about the loading
                     process and some results of it are written  into  the  internal  state  of  the  repository
                     object.

                     build_cache  is  a  boolean that specifies whether the information should be written to the
                     cache (see Building and Reusing the Repo Cache).

                     load_filelists, load_presto and load_updateinfo  are  booleans  that  specify  whether  the
                     Repo.filelists_fn,  Repo.presto_fn and Repo.updateinfo_fn files of the repository should be
                     processed.  These files may contain information needed for dependency solving,  downloading
                     or  querying  of  some  packages.  Enable  it if you are not sure (see Case for Loading the
                     Filelists).

   Error handling
       When an error or an unexpected event occurs during a Hawkey routine, an exception is raised:

       • if it is a general error that could be common to other Python programs,  one  of  the  standard  Python
         built-in exceptions is raised. For instance, IOError and TypeError can be raised from Hawkey.

       • programming  errors  within  Hawkey  that  cause  unexpected  or  invalid  states  raise  the  standard
         AssertionError. These should be reported as bugs against Hawkey.

       • programming errors due to incorrect use of the library usually produce hawkey.ValueException or one  of
         its subclasses, QueryException (poorly formed Query) or ArchException (unrecognized architecture).

       • sometimes  there  is a close call between blaming the error on an input parameter or on something else,
         beyond the programmer's control. hawkey.RuntimeException is generally used in this case.

       • hawkey.ValidationException is  raised  when  a  function  call  performs  a  preliminary  check  before
         proceeding with the main operation and this check fails.

       The class hierarchy for Hawkey exceptions is:

          +-- hawkey.Exception
               +-- hawkey.ValueException
               |    +-- hawkey.QueryException
               |    +-- hawkey.ArchException
               +-- hawkey.RuntimeException
               +-- hawkey.ValidationException

   Module level constants
       hawkey.CMDLINE_REPO_NAME
              The string name of the command line repository.

       hawkey.SYSTEM_REPO_NAME
              The string name of the system repository.

   Repositories
       class hawkey.Repo
              Instances  of  hawkey.Repo  point  to metadata of packages that are available to be installed. The
              metadata are expected to be in the "rpm-md" format. librepo may  help  you  with  downloading  the
              required files.

              cost   An  integer specifying a relative cost of accessing this repository. This value is compared
                     when the priorities of two repositories are the same. The repository with the  lowest  cost
                     is picked. It is useful to make the library prefer on-disk repositories to remote ones.

              filelists_fn
                     A valid string path to the readable "filelists" XML file if set.

              name   A string name of the repository.

              presto_fn
                     A valid string path to the readable "prestodelta.xml" (also called "deltainfo.xml") file if
                     set.

              primary_fn
                     A valid string path to the readable "primary" XML file if set.

              priority
                     An  integer  priority value of this repository. If there is more than one candidate package
                     for a particular operation, the one from the repository with the lowest priority  value  is
                     picked, possibly despite being less convenient otherwise (e.g. by being a lower version).

              repomd_fn
                     A valid string path to the readable "repomd.xml" file if set.

              updateinfo_fn
                     A valid string path to the readable "updateinfo.xml" file if set.

              __init__(name)
                     Initialize the repository with empty repomd_fn, primary_fn, filelists_fn and presto_fn. The
                     priority and the cost are set to 0.

                     name  is  a  string  giving  the  name  of  the repository. The name should not be equal to
                     hawkey.SYSTEM_REPO_NAME nor hawkey.CMDLINE_REPO_NAME

       Indices:

       • Index

DESIGN RATIONALE

   Selectors are not Queries
       Since both a Query and a Selector work to limit the set of all Sack's packages to a  subset,  it  can  be
       suggested  the  two  concepts  should be the same and e.g. Queries should be used for Goal specifications
       instead of Selectors:

          // create sack, goal, ...
          HyQuery q = hy_query_create(sack);
          hy_query_filter(q, HY_PKG_NAME, HY_EQ, "anaconda")
          hy_goal_install_query(q)

       This arrangment was in fact used in hawkey prior to version 0.3.0, just because  Queries  looked  like  a
       convenient  structure  to  hold  this  kind  of  information.  It  was  unfortunately  confusing  for the
       programmers: notice how evaluating the Query q would generally produce  several  packages  (anaconda  for
       different  architectures  and then different versions) but somehow when the same Query is passed into the
       goal methods it always results in up to one pacakge selected for  the  operation.  This  is  a  principal
       discrepancy.  Further,  Query  is  universal  and  allows  one to limit the package set with all sorts of
       criteria, matched in different ways (substrings, globbing, set operation) while  Selectors  only  support
       few.  Finally,  while  a  fresh  Query with no filters applied corresponds to all packages of the Sack, a
       fresh Selector with no limits set is of no meaning.

       An alternative to introducing a completely different concept was adding a separate  constructor  function
       for  Query, one that would from the start designate the Query to only accept settings compatible with its
       purpose of becoming the selecting element  in  a  Goal  operation  (in  Python  this  would  probably  be
       implemented  as  a  subclass  of  Query).  But  that  would  break  client's assumptions about Query (the
       unofficial C++ FAQ takes up the topic).

       Implementation note: Selectors reflect the kind of specifications that can be  directly  translated  into
       Libsolv  jobs,  without actually searching for a concrete package to put there. In other words, Selectors
       are specifically designed not to iterate over the package data (with exceptions, like glob matching) like
       Queries do. While Hawkey mostly aims to hide any twists and complexities of the  underlying  library,  in
       this case the combined reasons warrant a concession.

       Indices and tables

       • IndexModule IndexSearch Page

AUTHOR

       Aleš Kozumplík

COPYRIGHT

       2012-2025, Red Hat, Licensed under GPLv2+

0.69.0                                            Jan 17, 2025                                         HAWKEY(3)