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Unix manual page for pkgutil. (host=minya system=Darwin)
pkgutil(1) BSD General Commands Manual pkgutil(1)
NAME
pkgutil -- Query and manipulate Mac OS X Installer packages and receipts.
SYNOPSIS
pkgutil [options] [commands]
DESCRIPTION
pkgutil reads and manipulates Mac OS X Installer flat packages, and pro-
vides access to the ``receipt'' database used by the Installer. Options
are processed first, and affect the operation of all commands. Multiple
commands are performed sequentially in the given order.
The files and directories where receipts are stored are subject to
change. Always use pkgutil to query or modify them.
OPTIONS
--help, -h A brief summary of commands and usage.
--force, -f
Don't ask for confirmation before performing a potentially
destructive or ambiguous operation.
--verbose, -v
Output in a "human-readable" format with extra headers, foot-
ers, indentation, and other contextual information.
--volume path
Perform all operations on the specified volume or home direc-
tory. The root volume '/' will be used if unspecified.
--edit-pkg package-id
Specifies an existing receipt to be modified in-place by
--learn.
--only-files
List only files (not directories) in --files listing.
--only-dirs
List only directories (not files) in --files listing.
--regexp Try to match package-id arguments as a regular expression if
an exact match isn't found. See egrep(1) and re_format(7) for
syntax.
RECEIPT DATABASE COMMANDS
--packages, --pkgs
List all installed package IDs on the specified --volume.
--pkgs-plist
List all installed package IDs on the specified --volume in
Mac OS X plist(5) format.
--pkgs=REGEXP
List all installed package IDs matching REGEXP on the speci-
fied --volume. The equal sign (=) is required or the search
string will be ignored and all package IDs will be returned.
Be mindful of escaping characters in both your shell and the
regular expression. (Eg, 'pkgutil --pkgs=\\.D' searches for
package IDs matching the literal '.D' after escaping the
backslash from your shell and then the dot from the regex to
make it literal.) Regular expressions are more complex than
simple shell globbing. A dot (.) matches any character, while
'*' matches zero or more of the previous character. See
re_format(7) for a complete description of the syntax.
--files package-id
List all of the files installed under the package-id.
--export-plist package-id
Print all receipt information about the specified package-id
in the standard Mac OS X plist(5) format.
--pkg-info package-id
Print extended information about the specified package-id.
--pkg-info-plist package-id
Print extended information about the specified package-id in
Mac OS X plist(5) format.
--forget package-id
Discard all receipt data about package-id, but do not touch
the installed files. DO NOT use this command from an
installer package script to fix broken package design.
--learn path
Update the ACLs of the given path in the receipt identified
by --edit-pkg. This affects subsequent repair operations on
the package. This command cannot be used from package postin-
stall scripts, but if a postinstall script changes the ACLs
on the installed files, the receipt is automatically be
updated to reflect those changes. This command will not
update the filesystem permissions in the receipt.
--pkg-groups package-id
List all of the package groups this package-id is a member
of.
--groups List all of the package groups on the specified --volume.
--groups-plist
List all of the package groups on the specified --volume in
Mac OS X plist(5) format.
--group-pkgs group-id
List all of the packages that are members of this group-id.
--file-info path
Show the metadata known about path.
--file-info-plist path
Show the metadata known about path in Mac OS X plist(5) for-
mat.
FILE COMMANDS
--expand pkg-path dir-path
Expand the flat package at pkg-path into a new directory
specified by dir-path.
--flatten dir-path pkg-path
Flatten the dir-path into a new flat package created at
pkg-path. The directory to be flattened must have the proper
contents and layout for a flat package. This is not intended
as a substitute for pkgbuild(1).
--bom path Extract any BOM files from the flat pkg at path into /tmp and
return the filename(s). Suggested use is as an argument to
lsbom(8). Eg, "lsbom `pkgutil --bom path`". Note that some
flat package archives may contain no BOM, one BOM, or several
BOMs.
--payload-files path
List the files archived within the payload of the uninstalled
flat package(s) contained at path. This should be equivalent
to "lsbom -s `pkgutil --bom path`". Note that flat package
archives may contain more than one package, and the destina-
tion location for the uninstalled package(s) is unknown to
this command.
--check-signature pkg-path
Check the validity and trust of the signature on the package
at pkg-path. In addition to the status of the signature, the
associated certificate chain will be shown.
SEE ALSO
installer(8)
pkgbuild(1)
productbuild(1)
Mac OS March 2, 2011 Mac OS