/appstream

Tools and libraries to work with AppStream metadata

Primary LanguageCGNU Lesser General Public License v2.1LGPL-2.1

AppStream

Build Test Translation status

AppStream makes machine-readable software metadata easily accessible. It is a foundational block for modern Linux software centers, offering a seamless way to retrieve information about available software, no matter the repository it is contained in. It can provide data about available applications as well as available firmware, drivers, fonts and other components. This project it part of freedesktop.org.

What AppStream Offers

  • Specifications & Standards: Describes the XML-based MetaInfo files for use by upstream projects, as well as AppStream catalog metadata in XML or YAML for use by repository providers.
  • Reference Implementation: Provides GLib/GObject libraries for easy manipulation of metadata, with features for quick metadata indexing, querying and system compatibility checks. A Qt interface and other language bindings are provided as well.
  • Tools: Includes appstreamcli for metadata queries, data verification and diagnostics. The appstreamcli compose tool can be used for simple catalog metadata composition.

You can download signed release tarballs of AppStream on freedesktop.org.

Other links:

Information For Users

For Upstream Application Authors

For Distributors

  • AppStream Generator: Generate comprehensive metadata for your Linux distribution. Uses libappstream-compose internally.

Data Validation

Run appstreamcli validate --pedantic /path/to/metadata.xml on the XML metadata you want to check. Any error makes the data unreadable, warnings result in degraded data (and parts of it may be ignored), while infos are recommendations that are not fatal. Pedantic issues are nice-to-have or may not be applicable recommendations in all cases.

Contributing to AppStream

Your contributions make AppStream better! Whether you're a developer, translator, or enthusiast, there's a place for you here.

Issue Reporting

Issues are currently tracked via GitHub Issues. Feel free to file your bug, feature request or change request there. Please be patient in case it takes a while for your issue rto be reviewed, and be open to discussions in case of feature requests.

Pull Requests

We gladly consider your changes as pull requests! Thank you for contributing and taking the time to write a patch. Make sure your code compiles in maintainer mode, and you may want to format your changes to adhere to the AppStream coding style. To help with the latter we provide the autoformat.py helper script to format code via clang-format.

Build & Install

Dependencies

  • Meson (>= 0.62)
  • glib2 (>= 2.58)
  • GObject-Introspection
  • libxml2
  • libyaml
  • libcurl (>= 7.62)
  • libxmlb (>= 0.3.6)

Optional:

  • Vala Compiler (vapigen) (for Vala VAPI file)
  • Snowball (for stemming support)
  • Qt6 Core (for libappstream-qt)
  • DAPS (to build the specification)

If you are using the released tarballs, the HTML documentation will be prebuilt and DAPS, which is a heavy dependency, is not required to make it available locally.

Build Instructions

To compile AppStream, make sure that you have all required libraries (development files!) installed. Then continue (the build system will complain about missing dependencies).

Use Meson to configure AppStream and build it with Ninja:

mkdir build
cd build
meson setup <flags> ..
ninja
ninja test

For commonly used setup flags, use -Dqt=true to enable building the Qt interface, -Dvapi=true to build the Vala bindings, -Dcompose=true to build the AppStream catalog compose library and tools, -Dapt-support=true to enable integration with APT and -Ddocs=true to rebuild the documentation using DAPS.

During development and before submitting a pull-request, you may also want to use -Dmaintainer=true to enable stricter compiler flags and other changes to aid development.

Installation

To install the compiled binaries and required data, execute ninja install.

Translators

You can help translating AppStream via Weblate! Check out the AppStream Weblate Page, and thank you for helping to translate this project!