queryformat - Query formats
As it is impossible to please everyone with one style of query output, RPM allows you to specify what information should be printed during a query operation and how it should be formatted.
All of the information a package contains, apart from signatures and the actual files, is in a part of the package called the header. Each piece of information in the header has a tag associated with it which allows RPM to to tell the difference between the name and description of a package.
To get a list of all of the tags your version of RPM knows about, run the command 'rpm --querytags'. It will print out a list like (but much longer then) this:
RPMTAG_NAME RPMTAG_VERSION RPMTAG_RELEASE RPMTAG_SERIAL RPMTAG_SUMMARY RPMTAG_DESCRIPTION RPMTAG_BUILDTIME RPMTAG_BUILDHOST RPMTAG_INSTALLTIME RPMTAG_SIZE
As all of these tags begin with RPMTAG_, you may omit it from query format specifiers and it will be omitted from the rest of this documentation for the same reason.
A tag can consist of one element or an array of elements. Each element can be a string or number only.
A query format is passed to RPM after the --queryformat argument, and normally should be enclosed in single quotes. This query format is then used to print the information section of a query. This means that when both -i and --queryformat are used in a command, the -i is essentially ignored. Additionally, using --queryformat implies -q, so you may omit the -q as well.
The query format is similar to a C style printf string, which the printf(2) man page provides a good introduction to. However, as RPM already knows the type of data that is being printed, you must omit the type specifier. In its place put the tag name you wish to print enclosed in curly braces ({}). For example, the following RPM command prints the names and sizes of all of the packages installed on a system:
rpm -qa --queryformat '%{NAME} %{SIZE}
If you want to use printf formatters, they go between the % and {. To change the above command to print the NAME in the first 30 bytes and right align the size to, use:
rpm -qa --queryformat '%-30{NAME} %10{SIZE}
RPM uses many parallel arrays internally. For example, file sizes and file names are kept as an array of numbers and an array of strings respectively, with the first element in the size array corresponding to the first element in the name array.
To iterate over a set of parallel arrays, enclose the format to be used to print each item in the array within square brackets ([]). For example, to print all of the files and their sizes in the slang-devel package followed by their sizes, with one file per line, use this command:
rpm -q --queryformat '[%-50{FILENAMES} %10{FILESIZES}' slang-devel
Note that since the trailing newline is inside of the square brackets, one newline is printed for each filename.
A popular query format to try to construct is one that prints the name of a package and the name of a file it contains on one line, repeated for every file in the package. This query can be very useful for passing information to any program that's line oriented (such as grep or awk). If you try the obvious,
rpm --queryformat '[%{NAME} %{FILENAMES}' cdp
If you try this, you'll see RPM complain about a 'parallel array size mismatch'. Internally, all items in RPM are actually arrays, so the NAME is a string array containing one element. When you tell RPM to iterate over the NAME and FILENAMES elements, RPM notices the two tags have different numbers of elements and complains.
To make this work properly, you need to tell RPM to always print the first item in the NAME element. You do this by placing a '=' before the tag name, like this:
rpm --queryformat '[%{=NAME} %{FILENAMES}' cdp
which will give you the expected output.
cdp /usr/bin/cdp cdp /usr/bin/cdplay cdp /usr/man/man1/cdp.1
One of the weaknesses with query formats is that it doesn't recognize that the INSTALLTIME tag (for example) should be printed as a date instead of as a number. To compensate, you can specify one of a few different formats to use when printing tags by placing a colon followed the formatting name after the tag name. Here are some examples:
rpm -q --queryformat '%{NAME} %{INSTALLTIME:date} fileutils rpm -q --queryformat '[%{FILEMODES:perms} %{FILENAMES}' rpm rpm -q --queryformat '[%{REQUIRENAME} %{REQUIREFLAGS:depflags} %{REQUIREVERSION}' vlock
The :shescape may be used on plain strings to get a string which can pass through a single level of shell and give the original string.
Simple conditionals may be evaluated through query expressions. Expressions are delimited by %|...|. The only type of expression currently supported is a C-like ternary conditional, which provides simple if/then/else conditions. For example, the following query format display 'present' if the SOMETAG tag is present, and 'missing' otherwise:
%|SOMETAG?{present}:{missing}|
Notice that the subformats 'present' and 'missing' must be inside of curly braces.
The follwing example query is run against dev becuase I know verify is used there.
rpm -q --qf '[%{filenames} %{fileverifyflags}' dev
The flags are defined in rpmlib.h (check there for changes):
#define RPMVERIFY_MD5 (1 << 0) #define RPMVERIFY_FILESIZE (1 << 1) #define RPMVERIFY_LINKTO (1 << 2) #define RPMVERIFY_USER (1 << 3) #define RPMVERIFY_GROUP (1 << 4) #define RPMVERIFY_MTIME (1 << 5) #define RPMVERIFY_MODE (1 << 6) #define RPMVERIFY_RDEV (1 << 7)
A 1 bit in the output of the query means the check is enabled.
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