Provided by: devscripts_2.25.19ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       debian/watch version 5 - Format specification for debian/watch.

DESCRIPTION

       This document describe current version format of debian/watch (version 5).

FORMAT OF THE WATCH FILE, VERSION 5

       The version 5 format of debian/watch can be summarized as follows:

       •   File is written using rfc822-style, like other debian files.

       •   Key names are case-insensitive

       •   Key names hyphens are ignored. Then Matching-Pattern is equivalent to Matchingpattern

       •   A line started by # (hash) is a comment line and dropped.

       •   First paragraph

           •   The first non-comment line of the first paragraph is:

               Version: 5

               This is a required line and the recommended version number.

           •   All other options inserted into first paragraph are used as default values for next paragraphs

       •   The  following  paragraphs  (watch  sources)  specify  the  rules  for the selection of the candidate
           upstream tarball URLs:

       •   You can disable uscan temporarily by adding "Untrackable: <reason>"

             Version: 5
             Untrackable: temporarily I don't want to update this

             Source: https://keeped-site-to-be-used-later/
             Matching-Pattern: .*@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

           •   The Source: field is required. It gives the URL where  uscan  will  look  at  candidate  upstream
               tarballs.

           •   The  Matching-Pattern  field  is  recommended.  It specifies the full string matching pattern for
               hrefs in the web page. uscan provides also templates that  fill  this  field  automatically  (see
               below). Default value: "(?:@PACKAGE@)?@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@".

           Other available fields are described in WATCH FILE OPTIONS.

WATCH FILE OPTIONS

   Substitutions
       There are a few special strings which are substituted by uscan to make it easy to write the watch file.

       @PACKAGE@
           This  is  substituted  with  the  source package name found in the first line of the debian/changelog
           file.

       @COMPONENT@
           This is subsituted with the component name of the component name that uscan  is  currently  handling.
           Value is empty if used in main paragraph.

       @ANY_VERSION@
           This is substituted by the generic upstream version regex (capturing).

             [-_]?[Vv]?(\d[\-+\.:\~\da-zA-Z]*)

       @SEMANTIC_VERSION@
           This is substituted by the regex given by <https://semver.org> (capturing).

             [-_]?[Vv]?((?:0|[1-9]\d*)\.(?:0|[1-9]\d*)\.(?:0|[1-9]\d*)(?:-(?:(?:0|[1-9]\d*|\d*[a-zA-Z-][0-9a-zA-Z-]*)(?:\.(?:0|[1-9]\d*|\d*[a-zA-Z-][0-9a-zA-Z-]*))*))?(?:\+(?:[0-9a-zA-Z-]+(?:\.[0-9a-zA-Z-]+)*))?)

           This  permits  to  accept  "semantic versions" (ie ""((MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH)(-PRERELEASE)?(+BUILD)?)"").
           For example:

           •   1.2.3

           •   1.2.3-beta.1

           •   1.2.3-beta.1+build.20250720

       @STABLE_VERSION@
           Stable versions according to the rules of semantic versioning  (see  <https://semver.org>):  this  is
           substituted  by  pure  digit  upstream  version  regex  with  exactly  3 numbers: "MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH"
           (capturing).

             [-_]?[Vv]?((?:[1-9]\d*)(?:\.\d+){2}))

       @ARCHIVE_EXT@
           This is substituted by the typical archive file extension regex (non-capturing).

             (?i)(?:\.(?:tar\.xz|tar\.bz2|tar\.gz|tar\.zstd?|zip|tgz|tbz|txz))

       @SIGNATURE_EXT@
           This is substituted by the typical signature file extension regex (non-capturing).

             (?i)(?:\.(?:tar\.xz|tar\.bz2|tar\.gz|tar\.zstd?|zip|tgz|tbz|txz))'(?:\.(?:asc|pgp|gpg|sig|sign))'

       @DEB_EXT@
           This is substituted by the typical Debian extension regexp (capturing).

             [\+~](debian|dfsg|ds|deb)(\.)?(\d+)?$

       Some file extensions are not included in the above intentionally to avoid false positives.  You can still
       set such file extension patterns manually.

   Common optionsTemplate

           Templates simplify the write of debian/watch files. See uscan-templates(5).

       •   Source <url>

           URL where uscan will look at candidate upstream tarballs (required)

       •   Matching-Pattern: <regex>

           It specifies the full string matching pattern  for  hrefs  in  the  web  page.  uscan  provides  also
           templates that fill this field automatically (see below):

       •   Version-Schema <schema>

           The following values are accepted:

           •   previous: used when previous source contains Pgp-Mode (see "GPG/PGP options").

           •   group:  Debian  version  is  then built with all sources declared as "Version-Schema: group" (see
               "Grouped package").

           •   checksum: see "Grouped package". When "Version-Schema: checksum" is declared in global paragraph,
               it is applied to all source except the first one which is declared as "group".

       •   Version-Separator <separator>: string used to assemble component versions when Version-Schema is  set
           to  "group"  or "checksum".  The default value is "+~". This parameter must be in the first paragraph
           (just after "Version"), else it will be ignored.

   Component options
       Component: <component>
           Set the name of the secondary source tarball as "<spkg>_<oversion>.orig-<component>.tar.gz" for a MUT
           package (multiple upstream tarballs package).

       Ctype: <component-type>
           Set the type of component (only "nodejs" and "perl" are available for now).  This will help uscan  to
           find current version if component version is ignored.

           When  using  Ctype:  nodejs, uscan tries to find a version in "package.json", when using Ctype: perl,
           uscan tries to find a version in "META.json".  If a version is found, it is used as  current  version
           for  this  component, regardless version found in Debian version string. This permits a better change
           detection when using ignore or checksum as Debian version.

       Version-Constraint: <type>
           Add a constraint when downloading the component. Only one value is accepted for now:

           •   same, version must be identic as main source version

   Repack options
       Compression: <method>
           Set the compression method when the tarball is repacked (persistent).

           Available method values are what mk-origtargz supports, so xz, gzip (alias gz),  bzip2  (alias  bz2),
           lzma,  default.  The  default  method  is  currently  xz.   When uscan is launched in a debian source
           repository which format is "1.0" or undefined, the method switches to gzip.

           Please note the repacking of the upstream tarballs  by  mk-origtargz  happens  only  if  one  of  the
           following conditions is satisfied:

           •   USCAN_REPACK is set in the devscripts configuration.  See "DEVSCRIPTS CONFIGURATION VARIABLES" in
               uscan(1).

           •   --repack is set on the commandline.  See "COMMANDLINE OPTIONS" in uscan(1).

           •   repack is set in the watch line as Repack: yes.

           •   The upstream archive is of zip type including jar, xpi, ...

           •   The upstream archive is of zstd (Zstandard) type.

           •   Files-Excluded  or  Files-Excluded-component  stanzas  are  set  in  debian/copyright to make mk-
               origtargz invoked from uscan  remove  files  from  the  upstream  tarball  and  repack  it.   See
               "COPYRIGHT FILE EXAMPLES" in uscan(1) and mk-origtargz(1).

       Repack
           When set to yes, force repacking of the upstream tarball using the compression method.

       Repacksuffix: <suffix>
           Add  suffix  to the Debian package upstream version only when the source tarball is repackaged.  This
           rule should be used only for a single upstream tarball package. "+dfsg" or "+ds" or "+repack" are the
           common values used here (sometime followed by a digit).

           +dfsg is used when some non-free files are removed
           +ds is used when some files are removed for another reason (useless,...).
           +repack is used when source was re-downloaded without version number change
           Unzip-Opt: <options>
               Add the extra options to use with the unzip command, such as -a, -aa, and -b,  when  executed  by
               mk-origtargz.

   Download options
       Mode: <mode>
           Set the archive download mode.

           LWP This  mode  is  the default one which downloads the specified tarball from the archive URL on the
               web.  Automatically internal mode value is updated to either http or ftp by URL.

           git This mode accesses the upstream git archive directly with the git command and  packs  the  source
               tree with the specified tag via matching-pattern into spkg-version.tar.xz.

               If  the  upstream  publishes the released tarball via its web interface, please use it instead of
               using this mode. This mode is the last resort method.

               For git mode, matching-pattern specifies the full string matching pattern  for  tags  instead  of
               hrefs.  If matching-pattern is set to refs/tags/tag-matching-pattern, uscan downloads source from
               the refs/tags/matched-tag of  the  git  repository.   The  upstream  version  is  extracted  from
               concatenating the matched parts in ( ... ) with . .  See "WATCH FILE EXAMPLES".

               If  matching-pattern  is  set to HEAD, uscan downloads source from the HEAD of the git repository
               and the pertinent version is automatically generated with the date and hash of the  HEAD  of  the
               git repository.

               If  matching-pattern  is set to heads/branch, uscan downloads source from the named branch of the
               git repository.

               The local repository is created temporarily as either a bare  git  repository  or  a  cloned  git
               repository  if  Git-Modules  is  specified.  The tarball is then generated from the temporary git
               repository and saved in the destination directory.

               The temporary repository is normally erased after uscan execution but  is  kept  if  the  --debug
               option is specified.

               If  the  current  directory  is  a git repository and the searched repository is listed among the
               registered "remotes", then uscan will use it instead  of  cloning  separately.   The  only  local
               change is that uscan will run a "fetch" command to refresh the repository.

           svn This  mode  accesses  the upstream Subversion archive directly with the svn command and packs the
               source tree.

               For svn mode, matching-pattern specifies the full string matching pattern for  directories  under
               Subversion  repository  directory,  specified  via  URL.   The upstream version is extracted from
               concatenating the matched parts in ( ...  ) with . .

               If matching-pattern is set to HEAD, uscan downloads the latest  source  tree  of  the  URL.   The
               upstream version is then constructed by appending the last revision of the URL to 0.0~svn.

               As  commit  signing  is  not  possible  with  Subversion, the default pgpmode is set to none when
               mode=svn. Settings of pgpmode other than default and none are reported as errors.

       Git options

       Git-Pretty: <rule>
           Set the upstream version string  to  an  arbitrary  format  when  the  matching-pattern  is  HEAD  or
           heads/branch for git mode.  For the exact syntax, see the git-log manpage under tformat.  The default
           is Git-Pretty: 0.0~git%cd.%h. No version mangling rule is necessary for this case.

           When  Git-Pretty:  describe  is  used, the upstream version string is the output of the "git describe
           --tags | sed s/-/./g" command instead. For example, if the commit is the  5-th  after  the  last  tag
           v2.17.12  and its short hash is ged992511, then the string is v2.17.12.5.ged992511. For this case, it
           is   recommended   to   add    Filename-Mangle:    s/^(@PACKAGE@)-/$1-0.0~/    or    Filename-Mangle:
           s/^(@PACKAGE@-)v/$1/  to  make  the  upstream version string suitable for Debian. Please note that in
           order for Git-Pretty: describe  to  function  well,  upstream  need  to  avoid  tagging  with  random
           alphabetic tags.

           Using  Git-Pretty:  describe  also  sets  Git-Mode: full to make a full local clone of the repository
           automatically.

       Git-Date: <rule>
           Set the date string used by the Git-Pretty option to an arbitrary format when the Matching-Pattern is
           HEAD or heads/branch for git mode.  For the exact syntax, see the strftime manpage.  The  default  is
           date=%Y%m%d.

       Git-Export: <mode>
           Set  the  git  archive  export  operation mode. The default is Git-Export: default.  Set this to Git-
           Export: all to include all files in the .orig.tar archive, ignoring any export-ignore git  attributes
           defined by the upstream. This option also applies to submodules, if Git-Modules is specified.

           This option is valid only in git mode.

       Git-Mode: <mode>
           Set the git clone operation mode. The default is Git-Mode=shallow.  For some dumb git server, you may
           need to manually set Git-Mode=full to force full clone operation.

           If  the  current  directory  is  a  git  repository  and  the searched repository is listed among the
           registered "remotes", then uscan will use it instead of cloning separately.

       Git-Modules: <modules>
           Clone one or more submodules after cloning the main git repository. By default, uscan will clone none
           of the linked submodules to the git repository.

           To clone all submodules, set Git-Modules: all.

           To  clone  selected  submodules,  use  a  semicolon-separated   list.   For   example:   Git-Modules:
           m4;doc/common.

       Bare
           When  set  to  yes,  disable all site specific special case code such as URL redirector uses and page
           content alterations. (persistent)

       GPG/PGP options

       Pgp-Mode: <mode>
           Set the OpenPGP signature verification mode.

           auto
               uscan checks possible URLs for the signature file and autogenerates a Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle rule  to
               use it.

           default
               Use Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: <rules> to generate the candidate upstream signature file URL string from
               the upstream tarball URL. (default)

               If the specified Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle is missing, uscan checks possible URLs for the signature file
               and suggests adding a Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle rule.

           mangle
               Use Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: <rules> to generate the candidate upstream signature file URL string from
               the upstream tarball URL.

           next
               Verify  this  downloaded  tarball  file with the signature file specified in the next watch line.
               The next watch line must be Pgp-Mode: previous.  Otherwise, no verification occurs.

           previous
               Verify the downloaded tarball file specified in the previous watch line with this signature file.
               The previous watch line must be Pgp-Mode: next.

           self
               Verify the downloaded file foo.ext with its self signature and extract its content  tarball  file
               as foo.

           gittag
               Verify tag signature if mode=git.

           none
               No signature available (No warning).

       Decompress
           When set to yes, decompress compressed archive before the OpenPGP signature verification.

       Parsing options

       Search-Mode: <mode>
           Set the parsing search mode:

           html (default): search pattern in "href" parameter of <a> HTML tags
           plain: search pattern in the full page
               This is useful if page content is not HTML but JSON. Example with npmjs.com:

                 Version: 5

                 Search-Mode: plain
                 Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/aes-js
                 Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/aes-js/-/aes-js-(\d[\d\.]*)@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       HTTP options

       User-Agent: <user-agent-string>
           Set the user-agent string used to contact the HTTP(S) server as user-agent-string. (persistent)

   Filename and version manipulations
       Dversion-Mangle: <rules>
           Normalize  the  last upstream version string found in debian/changelog to compare it to the available
           upstream tarball version.  Removal of the Debian specific suffix such  as  s/@DEB_EXT@//  is  usually
           done here.

           You  can  also  use  "Dversion-Mangle:  auto",  this  is  exactly  the  same  than  "Dversion-Mangle:
           s/@DEB_EXT@//"

       Dirversion-Mangle: <rules>
           Normalize the directory path string matching the regex in a set of parentheses of http://URL  as  the
           sortable version index string.  This is used as the directory path sorting index only.

           Substitution such as s/PRE/~pre/; s/RC/~rc/ may help.

       Page-Mangle: <rules>
           Normalize  the  downloaded  web  page  string.   (Don't  use  this  unless this is absolutely needed.
           Generally, g flag is required for these rules.)

           This is handy if you wish to access Amazon AWS or Subversion repositories in which <a href="...">  is
           not used.

       Uversion-Mangle: <rules>
           Normalize  the candidate upstream version strings extracted from hrefs in the source of the web page.
           This is used as the version sorting index when selecting the latest upstream version.

           Substitution such as s/PRE/~pre/; s/RC/~rc/ may help.

           You  can  also  use  "Uversion-Mangle:  auto",  this  is  exactly  the  same  than  "Uversion-Mangle:
           s/(\d)[_\.\-\+]?((?:RC|rc|pre|dev|beta|alpha)\d*)$/$1~$2/"

       Version-Mangle: <rules>
           Syntactic shorthand for:

             Uversion-Mangle: <rules>
             Dversion-Mangle: <rules>

       hrefdecode=percent-encoding
           When  set  to  yes,  convert  the  selected  upstream  tarball  href  string from the percent-encoded
           hexadecimal string to the decoded normal URL string for obfuscated web sites.  Only  percent-encoding
           is available and it is decoded with s/%([A-Fa-f\d]{2})/chr hex $1/eg.

       Download-Url-Mangle: <rules>
           Convert  the  selected upstream tarball href string into the accessible URL for obfuscated web sites.
           This is run after hrefdecode.

       Filename-Mangle: <rules>
           Generate the upstream tarball filename from the selected href string if matching-pattern can  extract
           the  latest  upstream  version  <uversion>  from  the  selected href string.  Otherwise, generate the
           upstream tarball filename from its full URL string and set the missing <uversion> from the  generated
           upstream tarball filename.

           Without  this option, the default upstream tarball filename is generated by taking the last component
           of the URL and removing everything after any '?' or '#'.

           You  can  use  here  "Filename-Mangle:  auto",  this  is  exactly  the  same  than  "Filename-Mangle:
           s/.*?(@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@)/@PACKAGE@-$1/"     for    main    source    or    "Filename-Mangle:
           s/.*?(@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@)/@PACKAGE@-@COMPONENT@-$1/" for components.

       Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: <rules>
           Generate the candidate upstream signature file URL string from the upstream tarball URL.

       Oversion-Mangle: <rules>
           Generate the version string <oversion>  of  the  source  tarball  <spkg>_<oversion>.orig.tar.gz  from
           <uversion>.  This should be used to add a suffix such as +dfsg to a MUT package.

       Here,  the  mangling rules apply the rules to the pertinent string.  Multiple rules can be specified in a
       mangling rule string by making a concatenated string of each mangling rule separated by ; (semicolon).

       Each mangling rule cannot contain ; (semicolon), , (comma), or " (double quote).

       Each mangling rule behaves as if a Perl command "$string =~ rule" is executed.  There  are  some  notable
       details.

       •   rule may only use the s, tr, and y operations.

           s/regex/replacement/options
               Regex pattern match and replace the target string.  Only the g, i and x flags are available.  Use
               the  $1  syntax for back references (No \1 syntax).  Code execution is not allowed (i.e. no (?{})
               or (??{}) constructs).

           y/source/dest/ or tr/source/dest/
               Transliterate the characters in the target string.

EXAMPLE OF EXECUTION

       uscan reads the first entry in debian/changelog to  determine  the  source  package  name  and  the  last
       upstream version.

       For example, if the first entry of debian/changelog is:

       •   bar (3:2.03+dfsg-4) unstable; urgency=low

       then, the source package name is bar and the last Debian package version is 3:2.03+dfsg-4.

       The last upstream version is normalized to 2.03+dfsg by removing the epoch and the Debian revision.

       If the Dversion-Mangle rule exists, the last upstream version is further normalized by applying this rule
       to  it.   For  example,  if  the  last  upstream  version  is  2.03+dfsg indicating the source tarball is
       repackaged, the suffix +dfsg is removed by the string substitution s/\+dfsg\d*$// to make the  (Dversion-
       Mangled) last upstream version 2.03 and it is compared to the candidate upstream tarball versions such as
       2.03, 2.04, ... found in the remote site.  Thus, set this rule as:

         Dversion-Mangle: s/\+dfsg\d*$//

       uscan downloads a web page from http://URL specified in Source: field.

       •   If the directory name part of Source: has no parentheses, ( and ), it is taken as verbatim.

       •   If  the  directory name part of Source: has parentheses, ( and ), then uscan recursively searches all
           possible directories to find a page for the newest version.  If a Dirversion-Mangle rule exists,  the
           generated  sorting  index is used to find the newest version.  If a specific version is specified for
           the download, the matching version string has priority over the newest version.

       For example, this Source: http://URL may be specified as:

         Source: http://www.example.org/@ANY_VERSION@/

       Please note the trailing / in the above to make @ANY_VERSION@ as the directory.

       If the Page-Mangle rule exists, the whole downloaded web page as a string is normalized by applying  this
       rule  to  it.  This is very powerful tool and needs to be used with caution.  If other mangling rules can
       be used to address your objective, do not use this rule.

       The downloaded web page is scanned for hrefs defined in the <a href=" ... "> tag to locate the  candidate
       upstream  tarball  hrefs.   These  candidate upstream tarball hrefs are matched by the Perl regex pattern
       matching-pattern such as DL-(?:[\d\.]+?)/foo-(.+)\.tar\.gz to narrow down the candidates.   This  pattern
       match needs to be anchored at the beginning and the end.  For example, candidate hrefs may be:

       •   DL-2.02/foo-2.02.tar.gzDL-2.03/foo-2.03.tar.gzDL-2.04/foo-2.04.tar.gz

       Here the matching string of (.+) in matching-pattern is considered as the candidate upstream version.  If
       there  are multiple matching strings of capturing patterns in matching-pattern, they are all concatenated
       with .  (period) to form the candidate upstream version.  Make sure to use the non-capturing  regex  such
       as (?:[\d\.]+?) instead for the variable text matching part unrelated to the version.

       Then, the candidate upstream versions are:

       •   2.022.032.04

       The  downloaded  tarball  filename  is basically set to the same as the filename in the remote URL of the
       selected href.

       If the Uversion-Mangle rule exists, the candidate upstream versions are normalized by applying this  rule
       to  them.  (This rule may be useful if the upstream version scheme doesn't sort correctly to identify the
       newest version.)

       The upstream tarball href corresponding to the newest (Uversion-Mangled) candidate upstream version newer
       than the (Dversion-Mangled) last upstream version is selected.

       If multiple upstream tarball hrefs corresponding to a single version with different extensions exist, the
       highest compression one is chosen. (Priority: tar.xz > tar.lzma > tar.bz2 > tar.gz.)

       If the selected upstream tarball href is the relative URL, it is converted to the absolute URL using  the
       base URL of the web page.  If the <base href="  ...  "> tag exists in the web page, the selected upstream
       tarball href is converted to the absolute URL using the specified base URL in the base tag, instead.

       If the Download-Url-Mangle rule exists, the selected upstream tarball href is normalized by applying this
       rule to it. (This is useful for some sites with the obfuscated download URL.)

       If the Filename-Mangle rule exists, the downloaded tarball filename is generated by applying this rule to
       the  selected  href  if  matching-pattern  can  extract  the  latest upstream version <uversion> from the
       selected href string. Otherwise, generate the upstream tarball filename from its full URL string and  set
       the missing <uversion> from the generated upstream tarball filename.

       Without  the  Filename-Mangle rule, the default upstream tarball filename is generated by taking the last
       component of the URL and removing everything after any '?' or '#'.

       uscan downloads the selected upstream tarball to the parent ../ directory.  For example,  the  downloaded
       file may be:

       •   ../foo-2.04.tar.gz

       Let's call this downloaded version 2.04 in the above example generically as <uversion> in the following.

       If the Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle rule exists, the upstream signature file URL is generated by applying this rule
       to  the  (Download-Url-Mangled)  selected  upstream  tarball  href  and the signature file is tried to be
       downloaded from it.

       If the Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle rule doesn't exist, uscan warns user if the matching upstream signature file is
       available from the same URL with their filename being suffixed by the 5 common suffix asc, sig, sign, pgp
       and gpg. (You can avoid this warning by setting Pgp-Mode: none.)

       If the signature file is downloaded, the downloaded upstream tarball  is  checked  for  its  authenticity
       against  the  downloaded  signature  file using the armored keyring debian/upstream/signing-key.asc  (see
       "KEYRING FILE EXAMPLES" in uscan(1)).  If its signature is not valid, or not made by one  of  the  listed
       keys, uscan will report an error.

       If  the Oversion-Mangle rule exists, the source tarball version oversion is generated from the downloaded
       upstream version uversion by applying this rule. This rule is useful to add suffix such as +dfsg  to  the
       version of all the source packages of the MUT package for which the Repack-Suffix mechanism doesn't work.

       uscan invokes mk-origtargz to create the source tarball properly named for the source package with .orig.
       (or .orig-<component>. for the secondary tarballs) in its filename.

       case A: packaging of the upstream tarball as is
           mk-origtargz  creates a symlink ../bar_<oversion>.orig.tar.gz linked to the downloaded local upstream
           tarball. Here, bar is the source package name found in debian/changelog. The  generated  symlink  may
           be:

           •   ../bar_2.04.orig.tar.gz -> foo-2.04.tar.gz (as is)

           Usually, there is no need to set up Dversion-Mangle: ... for this case.

       case B: packaging of the upstream tarball after removing non-DFSG files
           mk-origtargz  checks  the  filename  glob  of  the  Files-Excluded  stanza  in  the  first section of
           debian/copyright, removes matching files to  create  a  repacked  upstream  tarball.   Normally,  the
           repacked  upstream  tarball is renamed with suffix to ../bar_<oversion><suffix>.orig.tar.gz using the
           Repack-Suffix: option  for  the  single  upstream  package.     Here  <oversion>  is  updated  to  be
           <oversion><suffix>.

           The  removal  of  files is required if files are not DFSG-compliant.  For such case, +dfsg is used as
           suffix.

           So the combined options are set as

             Dversion-Mangle: s/\+dfsg\d*$//
             Repack-Suffix: +dfsg">

           For example, the repacked upstream tarball may be:

           •   ../bar_2.04+dfsg.orig.tar.gz (repackaged)

       uscan normally invokes "uupdate --find --upstream-version oversion".

       Please note that --find option is used here since mk-origtargz has been  invoked  to  make  *.orig.tar.gz
       file already.  uscan picks bar from debian/changelog.

       It creates the new upstream source tree under the ../bar-<oversion> directory and Debianize it leveraging
       the last package contents.

WATCH FILE EXAMPLES

       When  writing  the  watch file, you should rely on the latest upstream source announcement web page.  You
       should not try to second guess the  upstream  archive  structure  if  possible.   Here  are  the  typical
       debian/watch files.

       Please note that executing uscan with -v or -vv reveals what exactly happens internally.

       The existence and non-existence of a space the before tailing \ (back slash) are significant.

       Some  undocumented  shorter configuration strings are used in the below EXAMPLES to help you with typing.
       These are intentional ones.  uscan is written to accept such common sense abbreviations  but  don't  push
       the limit.

   HTTP site (basic)
       Here is an example for the basic single upstream tarball.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/~user/release/@PACKAGE@.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       Or without using the substitution strings (not recommended):

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/~user/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/foo-([\d\.]+)\.tar\.gz

       For the upstream source package foo-2.0.tar.gz, this watch file downloads and creates the Debian orig.tar
       file foo_2.0.orig.tar.gz.

   HTTP site (Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle)
       Here  is  an  example  for the basic single upstream tarball with the matching signature file in the same
       file path.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/release/@PACKAGE@.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.asc%

       For the upstream source package foo-2.0.tar.gz and the upstream signature file  foo-2.0.tar.gz.asc,  this
       watch    file    downloads    these    files,    verifies    the    authenticity    using   the   keyring
       debian/upstream/signing-key.asc and creates the Debian orig.tar file foo_2.0.orig.tar.gz.

       Here is another example for the basic single  upstream  tarball  with  the  matching  signature  file  on
       decompressed tarball in the same file path.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/release/@PACKAGE@.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%@ARCHIVE_EXT@$%.asc%
         Decompress: yes

       For  the  upstream  source  package  foo-2.0.tar.gz and the upstream signature file foo-2.0.tar.asc, this
       watch   file   downloads    these    files,    verifies    the    authenticity    using    the    keyring
       debian/upstream/signing-key.asc and creates the Debian orig.tar file foo_2.0.orig.tar.gz.

   HTTP site (Pgp-Mode: next/previous)
       Here  is  an  example  for  the  basic  single  upstream  tarball with the matching signature file in the
       unrelated file path.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/release/@PACKAGE@.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/(?:\d+)/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Mode: next

         Source: http://example.com/release/@PACKAGE@.html
         Matching-Pattern: .*?files/(?:\d+)/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@SIGNATURE_EXT@
         Pgp-Mode: previous
         Version-Schema: previous

       (?:\d+) part can be any random value.  The tarball file can have 53, while the signature  file  can  have
       33.

       ([\d\.]+)  part  for  the  signature file has a strict requirement to match that for the upstream tarball
       specified in the previous line by having previous as version in the watch line.

   HTTP site (flexible)
       Here is an example for the maximum flexibility of upstream tarball and signature file extensions.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/DL/
         Matching-Pattern: files/(?:\d+)/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Mode: next

         Source: http://example.com/DL/
         Matching-Pattern: files/(?:\d+)/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@SIGNATURE_EXT@
         Pgp-Mode: previous
         Version-Schema: previous

   HTTP site (basic MUT)
       Here is an example for the basic multiple upstream tarballs.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/foo-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%

         Component: bar
         Source: http://example.com/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/foobar-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%
         Version-Constraint: same

         Component: baz
         Source: http://example.com/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/foobaz-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%
         Version-Constraint: same

       For the  main  upstream  source  package  foo-2.0.tar.gz  and  the  secondary  upstream  source  packages
       foobar-2.0.tar.gz  and foobaz-2.0.tar.gz which install under bar/ and baz/, this watch file downloads and
       creates    the    Debian    orig.tar    file     foo_2.0.orig.tar.gz,     foo_2.0.orig-bar.tar.gz     and
       foo_2.0.orig-baz.tar.gz.  Also, these upstream tarballs are verified by their signature files.

   HTTP site (recursive directory scanning)
       Here is an example with the recursive directory scanning for the upstream tarball and its signature files
       released in a directory named after their version.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/@ANY_VERSION@/
         Matching-Pattern: Twisted-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Dirversion-Mangle: s/-PRE/~pre/;s/-RC/~rc/
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%

       Here, the web site should be accessible at the following URL:

         http://tmrc.mit.edu/mirror/twisted/Twisted/

       Here, Dirversion-Mangle option is used to normalize the sorting order of the directory names.

   HTTP site (alternative shorthand)
       For the bare HTTP site where you can directly see archive filenames, the normal watch file:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Text/
         Matching-Pattern: Text-CSV_XS-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%

       can be rewritten in an alternative shorthand form only with a single string covering URL and filename:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-module/Text/
         Matching-Pattern: Text-CSV_XS-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Pgp-Sig-Url-Mangle: s%$%.sig%

   HTTP site (funny version)
       For  a  site  which has funny version numbers, the parenthesized groups will be joined with . (period) to
       make a sanitized version number.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://www.site.com/pub/foobar/
         Matching-Pattern: foobar_v(\d+)_(\d+)@ARCHIVE_EXT@

   HTTP site (DFSG)
       The upstream part of the Debian version number  can  be  mangled  to  indicate  the  source  package  was
       repackaged to clean up non-DFSG files:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://some.site.org/some/path/
         Matching-Pattern: foobar-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Dversion-Mangle: s/\+dfsg\d*$//
         Repacksuffix: +dfsg

       See "COPYRIGHT FILE EXAMPLES" in uscan(1).

   HTTP site (Filename-Mangle)
       The  upstream  tarball  filename is found by taking the last component of the URL and removing everything
       after any '?' or '#'.

       If    this    does    not    fit    to     you,     use     Filename-Mangle.      For     example,     <A
       href="http://foo.bar.org/dl/?path=&dl=foo-0.1.1.tar.gz"> could be handled as:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://foo.bar.org/dl/
         Matching-Pattern: \?path=&dl=foo-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Filename-Mangle: s/.*=(.*)/$1/

       <A href="http://foo.bar.org/dl/?path=&dl_version=0.1.1"> could be handled as:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://foo.bar.org/dl/
         Matching-Pattern: \?path=&dl_version=@ANY_VERSION@
         Filename-Mangle: s/.*=(.*)/foo-$1\.tar\.gz/

       If  the  href string has no version using matching-pattern, the version can be obtained from the full URL
       using Filename-Mangle.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://foo.bar.org/dl/@ANY_VERSION@/
         Matching-Pattern: foo.tar.gz
         Filename-Mangle: s|.*/dl/(.*)/foo\.tar\.gz|foo-$1\.tar\.gz|

   HTTP site (Download-Url-Mangle)
       The option Download-Url-Mangle can be used to mangle the URL of the file to download.  This can  only  be
       used  with http:// URLs.  This may be necessary if the link given on the web page needs to be transformed
       in some way into one which will work automatically, for example:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://developer.berlios.de/project/showfiles.php?group_id=2051
         Matching-Pattern: http://prdownload.berlios.de/softdevice/vdr-softdevice-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s/prdownload/download/

   HTTP site (Oversion-Mangle, MUT)
       The option Oversion-Mangle can be used to mangle the version of  the  source  tarball  (.orig.tar.gz  and
       .orig-bar.tar.gz).  For example, +dfsg can be added to the upstream version as:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/~user/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/foo-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Oversion-Mangle: s/(.*)/$1+dfsg/

         Component: bar
         Source: http://example.com/~user/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: files/bar-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Version-Constraint: same

       See "COPYRIGHT FILE EXAMPLES" in uscan(1).

   HTTP site (Page-Mangle)
       The  option  Page-Mangle  can be used to mangle the downloaded web page before applying other rules.  The
       non-standard web page without proper <a href=" << ... >> "> entries can be converted.   For  example,  if
       foo.html uses <a bogus=" ... ">, this can be converted to the standard page format with:

         Version: 5

         Source: href=/g"
         Matching-Pattern: http://example.com/release/foo.html
         Page-Mangle: "s/<a\s+bogus=/<a
         Version-Constraint: files/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       Please note the use of g here to replace all occurrences.

       If foo.html uses <Key> ... </Key>, this can be converted to the standard page format with:

         Version: 5

         Source: http://example.com/release/foo.html
         Matching-Pattern: (?:.*)/@PACKAGE@@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Page-Mangle: s%<Key>([^<]*)</Key>%<Key><a href="$1">$1</a></Key>%g

   FTP site (basic):
         Version: 5

         Source: ftp://ftp.tex.ac.uk/tex-archive/web/c_cpp/cweb/
         Matching-Pattern: cweb-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

   FTP site (regex special characters):
         Version: 5

         Source: ftp://ftp.worldforge.org/pub/worldforge/libs/Atlas-C++/transitional/
         Matching-Pattern: Atlas-C\+\+-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       Please  note  that  this  URL is connected to be  ... libs/Atlas-C++/ ...  . For ++, the first one in the
       directory path is verbatim while the one in the filename is escaped by \.

   FTP site (funny version)
       This is another way of handling site with funny version numbers, this time using  mangling.   (Note  that
       multiple  groups  will  be  concatenated  before  mangling  is  performed, and that mangling will only be
       performed on the basename version number, not any path version numbers.)

         Version: 5

         Source: ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/ALPHA/wine/development/
         Matching-Pattern: Wine-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Uversion-Mangle: s/^/0.0./

   sf.net
       For SourceForge based projects, qa.debian.org runs a redirector which allows a simpler form of  URL.  The
       format below will automatically be rewritten to use the redirector with the watch file:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://sf.net/<project>/
         Matching-Pattern: <tar-name>-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       For audacity, set the watch file as:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://sf.net/audacity/
         Matching-Pattern: audacity-minsrc-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       Please  note,  you  can  still  use  normal functionalities of uscan to set up a watch file for this site
       without using the redirector.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://sourceforge.net/projects/audacity/files/audacity/@ANY_VERSION@/
         Matching-Pattern: (?:.*)audacity-minsrc-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@/download
         Filename-Mangle: s%(?:.*)audacity-minsrc-(.+)\.tar\.xz/download%audacity-$1.tar.xz%
         Uversion-Mangle: s/-pre/~pre/

       Here, % is used as the separator instead of the standard /.

   github.com
       For GitHub based projects, you can use the releases or tags API  page.   If  upstream  releases  properly
       named  tarballs  on  their  releases  page,  you  can  search  for  the  browser  download  URL  (API key
       browser_download_url):

         Version: 5

         Template: Github
         Owner: <user>
         Project: <project>

       which is equivalent to:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://api.github.com/repos/<user>/<project>/git/matching-refs/tags/
         Matching-Pattern: https://api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+/git/refs/tags/@ANY_VERSION@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s%(api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+)/git/refs/%$1/tarball/refs/%g
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1.tar.gz%
         Search-Mode: plain
         Pgp-Mode: plain

       See uscan-templates(5) for more.

       It is also possible to filter tags by prefix. For example to get only tags starting by "v1":

         Version: 5

         Source: https://api.github.com/repos/<user>/<project>/git/matching-refs/tags/v1
         Matching-Pattern: https://api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+/git/refs/tags/@ANY_VERSION@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s%(api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+)/git/refs/%$1/tarball/refs/%g
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1.tar.gz%
         Searchmode: plain

       Alternatives with releases only (if upstream does not delete tag after release):

         Version: 5

         Source: https://api.github.com/repos/<user>/<project>/git/matching-refs/tags/
         Matching-Pattern: https://api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+/git/refs/tags/@ANY_VERSION@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s%api.github.com/repos/([^/]+/[^/]+)/git/refs/tags/@ANY_VERSION@%github.com/$1/archive/refs/tags/$2.tar.gz%g
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1.tar.gz%
         Searchmode: plain

       In case of release that does not use tags or deleted tags:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://api.github.com/repos/<user>/<project>/releases?per_page=100
         Matching-Pattern: https://api.github.com/repos/<user>/<project>/tarball/@ANY_VERSION@
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1.tar.gz%
         Searchmode: plain

       If upstream releases alpha/beta tarballs, you will need  to  make  use  of  the  Uversion-Mangle  option:
       Uversion-Mangle: s/(a|alpha|b|beta|c|dev|pre|rc)/~$1/

       If  upstream  forget  to  tag  a  release  for  instance  here  the 1.2.3 version corresponding to commit
       "0123456789abcdf01234567890abcef012345678", you could download it, using  the  following  combination  of
       Oversion-Mangle, Filename-Mangle, Download-Url-Mangle options:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://api.github.com/repos/ImageMagick/ImageMagick/git/matching-refs/tags/
         Matching-Pattern: https://api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+/git/refs/tags/@ANY_VERSION@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s%(api.github.com/repos/[^/]+/[^/]+)/git/refs/.*%$1/tarball/0123456789abcdf01234567890abcef012345678%g
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*%1.2.3~git.tar.gz%
         Oversion-Mangle: s/.*/1.2.3~git/g
         Searchmode: plain

       Remember, in this case, after gbp import-orig --uscan to revert the debian/watch file.

   Forgejo (Codeberg)
       Releases with manually-attached tarballs (assets[...].browser_download_url):

         Version: 5

         Source: https://codeberg.org/api/v1/repos/<user>/<project>/releases
         Matching-Pattern: https://codeberg.org/<user>/<project>/releases/download/[^/-_v]*@ANY_VERSION@/[^"]*@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Search-Mode: plain

       Releases with automatically-generated tarballs (tarball_url):

         Version: 5

         Source: https://codeberg.org/api/v1/repos/<user>/<project>/releases
         Matching-Pattern: https://codeberg.org/<user>/<project>/archive/[^"-_v]*@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Search-Mode: plain
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/[^"-_v]*@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1%

       Tags with automatically-generated tarballs (tarball_url):

         Version: 5

         Source: https://codeberg.org/api/v1/repos/<user>/<project>/tags
         Matching-Pattern: https://codeberg.org/<user>/<project>/archive/[^"-_v]*@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Search-Mode: plain
         Filename-Mangle: s%.*/[^"-_v]*@ANY_VERSION@%@PACKAGE@-$1%

       Replace codeberg.org with the Forgejo instance in question.

   PyPI
       For PyPI based projects, pypi.debian.net runs a redirector which allows a simpler form of URL. The format
       below will automatically be rewritten to use the redirector with the watch file:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/<initial>/<project>/
         Matching-Pattern: <tar-name>-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       For cfn-sphere, set the watch file as:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://pypi.python.org/packages/source/c/cfn-sphere/
         Matching-Pattern: cfn-sphere-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@

       Please  note,  you  can  still  use  normal functionalities of uscan to set up a watch file for this site
       without using the redirector.

         Version: 5

         Source: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/cfn-sphere/
         Matching-Pattern: https://pypi.python.org/packages/.*/.*/.*/cfn-sphere-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@#.*

   code.google.com
       Sites which used to be hosted on the Google Code service should have  migrated  to  elsewhere  (github?).
       Please look for the newer upstream site if available.

   npmjs.org (node modules)
       npmjs.org modules are published in JSON files. Here is a way to read them:

         Version: 5

         Template: Npmregistry
         Dist: @lemonldap/handler

       See uscan-templates(5) for more.

   Grouped package
       Some node modules are split into multiple little upstream package. Here is a way to group them:

         Version: 5
         Version-Schema: group

         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb/-/mongodb-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: bson
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/bson
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/bson/-/bson-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: mongodb-core
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb-core
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb-core/-/mongodb-core-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: requireoptional
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/require_optional
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/require_optional/-/require_optional-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

       Package version is then the concatenation of upstream versions separated by "+~".

       To  avoid having a too long version, the "checksum" method can be used.  In this case, the main source is
       automatically declared as "group":

         Version: 5
         Version-Schema: checksum

         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb/-/mongodb-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: bson
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/bson
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/bson/-/bson-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: mongodb-core
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb-core
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/mongodb-core/-/mongodb-core-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

         Component: requireoptional
         Source: https://registry.npmjs.org/require_optional
         Matching-Pattern: https://registry.npmjs.org/require_optional/-/require_optional-@ANY_VERSION@@ARCHIVE_EXT@
         Searchmode: plain

       The "checksum" is made up of the separate sum  of  each  number  composing  the  component  versions  and
       prefixed  with  ~cs  (short  for checksum).  Following is an example with 3 components whose versions are
       "1.2.4", "2.0.1" and "10.0", with the main tarball having version "2.0.6":

         Main: 2.0.6
         Comp1:         1 .     2 .     4
         Comp2:         2 .     0 .     1
         Comp3:        10 .     0
         ================================
         Result  : 1+2+10 . 2+0+0 .   4+1
         Checksum:     13 .     2 .     5
         ================================
         Final Version:   2.0.6+~cs13.2.5

       uscan will also display the original version string before being encoded into the checksum, which can for
       example be used in a debian/changelog entry to easily follow the changes:

         2.0.6+~1.2.4+~2.0.1+~10.0

       Note: This feature currently accepts only versions composed of digits and full stops (`.`).

   direct access to the git repository (tags)
       If the upstream only publishes its code via the git repository and its  code  has  no  web  interface  to
       obtain  the  release  tarball, you can use uscan with the tags of the git repository to track and package
       the new upstream release.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://git.ao2.it/tweeper.git
         Matching-Pattern: refs/tags/v@ANY_VERSION@
         Git-Mode: full
         Mode: git

       Please note "git ls-remote" is used to obtain references for tags.

       If a tag v20.5 is the newest tag, the above example downloads spkg-20.5.tar.xz after making a full  clone
       of the git repository which is needed for dumb git server.

       If tags are signed, set Pgp-Mode: gittag to verify them.

   direct access to the git repository (HEAD)
       If  the upstream only publishes its code via the git repository and its code has no web interface nor the
       tags to obtain the released tarball, you can use uscan with the HEAD of the git repository to  track  and
       package the new upstream release with an automatically generated version string.

         Version: 5

         Source: https://github.com/Debian/dh-make-golang
         Matching-Pattern: HEAD
         Mode: git

       Please note that a local shallow copy of the git repository is made with "git clone --bare --depth=1 ..."
       normally   in   the   target  directory.   uscan  generates  the  new  upstream  version  with  "git  log
       --date=format:%Y%m%d --pretty=0.0~git%cd.%h" on this local copy of repository as its default behavior.

       The generation of the upstream version string may the adjusted to your taste  by  adding  Git-Pretty  and
       Git-Date options.

   direct access to the git repository (with submodules)
       If  the upstream only publishes its code via a git repository and the repository includes submodules, you
       can use uscan with the tags or HEAD of the git repository to track and package the new upstream release.

       Use Git-Modules to clone all submodules:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://github.com/namespace/project
         Matching-Pattern: [refs/tags/v@ANY_VERSION@|HEAD]
         Git-Mode: shallow
         Git-Modules: all
         Mode: git

       To clone selected submodules (and exclude others), use Git-Modules with a semicolon-separated list:

         Version: 5

         Source: https://github.com/namespace/project
         Matching-Pattern: [refs/tags/v@ANY_VERSION@|HEAD]
         Git-Mode: shallow
         Git-Modules: m4;doc/common
         Mode: git

   direct access to the Subversion repository (tags)
       If the upstream only publishes its code via the Subversion repository and its code has no  web  interface
       to  obtain the release tarball, you can use uscan with the tags of the Subversion repository to track and
       package the new upstream release.

         Version: 5

         Source: svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/jmol/code/tags/
         Matching-Pattern: @ANY_VERSION@\/
         Mode: svn

   direct access to the Subversion repository (HEAD)
       If the upstream only publishes its code via the Subversion repository and its code has no  web  interface
       to  obtain  the  release  tarball,  you  can  use uscan to get the most recent source of a subtree in the
       repository with an automatically generated version string.

         Source: svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/jmol/code/trunk/
         Matching-Pattern: HEAD
         Mode: svn

       By default, uscan generates the new upstream version by appending the revision number to "0.0~svn".  This
       can later be changed using Filename-Mangle.

   Fossil
       For Fossil based projects, the tarball URL can be deduced from the taglist page.

         Version: 5

         Source: http://grammalecte.net:8080/taglist
         Matching-Pattern: /timeline\?t=@ANY_VERSION@
         Download-Url-Mangle: s#/timeline\?t=(@ANY_VERSION@)#/tarball/Grammalecte.tar.gz?r=$1#
         Filename-Mangle: s/timeline\?t=(@ANY_VERSION@)/@PACKAGE@-$1.tar.gz/
         Searchmode: plain

   Gitlab
       Gitlab  uses  a  specific  way to expose archive corresponding to tags. Uscan embeds a Mode: gitlab to be
       able to download such archives. Examples:

       •   Using templates

             Version: 5

             Template: Gitlab
             Dist: https://salsa.debian.org/debian/devscripts

       •   Using Mode: gitlab

             Version: 5

             Source: https://salsa.debian.org/debian/devscripts
             Mode: gitlab
             Matching-Pattern: @STABLE_VERSION@
             Pgp-Mode: none
             Filename-Mangle: s/.*(@ARCHIVE_EXT@)/@PACKAGE@.tar.gz/

SEE ALSO

       uscan(1), uscan-templates(5), mk-origtargz(1), perlre(1), uupdate(1), devscripts.conf(5)

AUTHOR

       The original version of  uscan  was  written  by  Christoph  Lameter  <clameter@debian.org>.  Significant
       improvements, changes and bugfixes were made by Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org>. HTTP support was added by
       Piotr  Roszatycki <dexter@debian.org>. The program was rewritten in Perl by Julian Gilbey. Xavier Guimard
       converted it in object-oriented Perl using Moo.

Debian Utilities                                   2025-09-02                                    DEBIAN-WATCH(5)