bts(1)



NAME

   bts - developers' command line interface to the BTS

SYNOPSIS

   bts [options] command [args] [#comment] [.|, command [args] [#comment]]
   ...

DESCRIPTION

   This is a command line interface to the Debian Bug Tracking System
   (BTS), intended mainly for use by developers. It lets the BTS be
   manipulated using simple commands that can be run at the prompt or in a
   script, does various sanity checks on the input, and constructs and
   sends a mail to the BTS control address for you. A local cache of web
   pages and e-mails from the BTS may also be created and updated.

   In general, the command line interface is the same as what you would
   write in a mail to control@bugs.debian.org, just prefixed with "bts".
   For example:

    % bts severity 69042 normal
    % bts merge 69042 43233
    % bts retitle 69042 blah blah

   A few additional commands have been added for your convenience, and
   this program is less strict about what constitutes a valid bug number.
   For example, "severity Bug#85942 normal" is understood, as is "severity
   #85942 normal".  (Of course, your shell may regard "#" as a comment
   character though, so you may need to quote it!)

   Also, for your convenience, this program allows you to abbreviate
   commands to the shortest unique substring (similar to how cvs lets you
   abbreviate commands). So it understands things like "bts cl 85942".

   It is also possible to include a comment in the mail sent to the BTS.
   If your shell does not strip out the comment in a command like "bts
   severity 30321 normal #inflated severity", then this program is smart
   enough to figure out where the comment is, and include it in the email.
   Note that most shells do strip out such comments before they get to the
   program, unless the comment is quoted.  (Something like "bts severity
   #85942 normal" will not be treated as a comment!)

   You can specify multiple commands by separating them with a single dot,
   rather like update-rc.d; a single comma may also be used; all the
   commands will then be sent in a single mail. It is important the
   dot/comma is surrounded by whitespace so it is not mistaken for part of
   a command.  For example (quoting where necessary so that bts sees the
   comment):

    % bts severity 95672 normal , merge 95672 95673 \#they are the same!

   The abbreviation "it" may be used to refer to the last mentioned bug
   number, so you could write:

    % bts severity 95672 wishlist , retitle it "bts: please add a --foo option"

   Please use this program responsibly, and do take our users into
   consideration.

OPTIONS

   bts examines the devscripts configuration files as described below.
   Command line options override the configuration file settings, though.

   -o, --offline
       Make bts use cached bugs for the show and bugs commands, if a cache
       is available for the requested data. See the cache command, below
       for information on setting up a cache.

   --online, --no-offline
       Opposite of --offline; overrides any configuration file directive
       to work offline.

   -n, --no-action
       Do not send emails but print them to standard output.

   --cache, --no-cache
       Should we attempt to cache new versions of BTS pages when
       performing show/bugs commands?  Default is to cache.

   --cache-mode={min|mbox|full}
       When running a bts cache command, should we only mirror the basic
       bug (min), or should we also mirror the mbox version (mbox), or
       should we mirror the whole thing, including the mbox and the boring
       attachments to the BTS bug pages and the acknowledgement emails
       (full)?  Default is min.

   --cache-delay=seconds
       Time in seconds to delay between each download, to avoid hammering
       the BTS web server. Default is 5 seconds.

   --mbox
       Open a mail reader to read the mbox corresponding to a given bug
       number for show and bugs commands.

   --mailreader=READER
       Specify the command to read the mbox.  Must contain a "%s" string
       (unquoted!), which will be replaced by the name of the mbox file.
       The command will be split on white space and will not be passed to
       a shell.  Default is 'mutt -f %s'.  (Also, %% will be substituted
       by a single % if this is needed.)

   --cc-addr=CC_EMAIL_ADDRESS
       Send carbon copies to a list of users. CC_EMAIL_ADDRESS should be a
       comma-separated list of email addresses.

   --use-default-cc
       Add the addresses specified in the configuration file option
       BTS_DEFAULT_CC to the list specified using --cc-addr.  This is the
       default.

   --no-use-default-cc
       Do not add addresses specified in BTS_DEFAULT_CC to the carbon copy
       list.

   --sendmail=SENDMAILCMD
       Specify the sendmail command.  The command will be split on white
       space and will not be passed to a shell.  Default is
       /usr/sbin/sendmail.  The -t option will be automatically added if
       the command is /usr/sbin/sendmail or /usr/sbin/exim*.  For other
       mailers, if they require a -t option, this must be included in the
       SENDMAILCMD, for example: --sendmail="/usr/sbin/mymailer -t".

   --mutt
       Use mutt for sending of mails. Default is not to use mutt, except
       for some commands.

       Note that one of $DEBEMAIL or $EMAIL must be set in the environment
       in order to use mutt to send emails.

   --no-mutt
       Don't use mutt for sending of mails.

   --soap-timeout=SECONDS
       Specify a timeout for SOAP calls as used by the select and status
       commands.

   --smtp-host=SMTPHOST
       Specify an SMTP host.  If given, bts will send mail by talking
       directly to this SMTP host rather than by invoking a sendmail
       command.

       The host name may be followed by a colon (":") and a port number in
       order to use a port other than the default.  It may also begin with
       "ssmtp://" or "smtps://" to indicate that SMTPS should be used.

       Note that one of $DEBEMAIL or $EMAIL must be set in the environment
       in order to use direct SMTP connections to send emails.

       Note that when sending directly via an SMTP host, specifying
       addresses in --cc-addr or BTS_DEFAULT_CC that the SMTP host will
       not relay will cause the SMTP host to reject the entire mail.

       Note also that the use of the reassign command may, when either
       --interactive or --force-interactive mode is enabled, lead to the
       automatic addition of a Cc to $newpackage@packages.debian.org.  In
       these cases, the note above regarding relaying applies.  The
       submission interface (port 587) on reportbug.debian.org does not
       support relaying and, as such, should not be used as an SMTP server
       for bts under the circumstances described in this paragraph.

   --smtp-username=USERNAME, --smtp-password=PASSWORD
       Specify the credentials to use when connecting to the SMTP server
       specified by --smtp-host.  If the server does not require
       authentication then these options should not be used.

       If a username is specified but not a password, bts will prompt for
       the password before sending the mail.

   --smtp-helo=HELO
       Specify the name to use in the HELO command when connecting to the
       SMTP server; defaults to the contents of the file /etc/mailname, if
       it exists.

       Note that some SMTP servers may reject the use of a HELO which
       either does not resolve or does not appear to belong to the host
       using it.

   --bts-server
       Use a debbugs server other than https://bugs.debian.org.

   -f, --force-refresh
       Download a bug report again, even if it does not appear to have
       changed since the last cache command.  Useful if a
       --cache-mode=full is requested for the first time (otherwise
       unchanged bug reports will not be downloaded again, even if the
       boring bits have not been downloaded).

   --no-force-refresh
       Suppress any configuration file --force-refresh option.

   --only-new
       Download only new bugs when caching. Do not check for updates in
       bugs we already have.

   --include-resolved
       When caching bug reports, include those that are marked as
       resolved.  This is the default behaviour.

   --no-include-resolved
       Reverse the behaviour of the previous option.  That is, do not
       cache bugs that are marked as resolved.

   --no-ack
       Suppress acknowledgment mails from the BTS.  Note that this will
       only affect the copies of messages CCed to bugs, not those sent to
       the control bot.

   --ack
       Do not suppress acknowledgement mails.  This is the default
       behaviour.

   -i, --interactive
       Before sending an e-mail to the control bot, display the content
       and allow it to be edited, or the sending cancelled.

   --force-interactive
       Similar to --interactive, with the exception that an editor is
       spawned before prompting for confirmation of the message to be
       sent.

   --no-interactive
       Send control e-mails without confirmation.  This is the default
       behaviour.

   -q, --quiet
       When running bts cache, only display information about newly cached
       pages, not messages saying already cached.  If this option is
       specified twice, only output error messages (to stderr).

   --no-conf, --noconf
       Do not read any configuration files.  This can only be used as the
       first option given on the command-line.

COMMANDS

   For full details about the commands, see the BTS documentation.
   <https://www.debian.org/Bugs/server-control>

   show [options] [bug number | package | maintainer | : ] [opt=val ...]
   show [options] [src:package | from:submitter] [opt=val ...]
   show [options] [tag:tag | usertag:tag ] [opt=val ...]
   show [release-critical | release-critical/... | RC]
       This is a synonym for bts bugs.

   bugs [options] [bug_number | package | maintainer | : ] [opt=val ...]
   bugs [options] [src:package | from:submitter] [opt=val ...]
   bugs [options] [tag:tag | usertag:tag ] [opt=val ...]
   bugs [release-critical | release-critical/... | RC]
       Display the page listing the requested bugs in a web browser using
       sensible-browser(1).

       Options may be specified after the bugs command in addition to or
       instead of options at the start of the command line: recognised
       options at this point are: -o/--offline/--online, -m/--mbox,
       --mailreader and --[no-]cache.  These are described earlier in this
       manpage.  If either the -o or --offline option is used, or there is
       already an up-to-date copy in the local cache, the cached version
       will be used.

       The meanings of the possible arguments are as follows:

       (none)  If nothing is specified, bts bugs will display your bugs,
               assuming that either DEBEMAIL or EMAIL (examined in that
               order) is set to the appropriate email address.

       bug_number
               Display bug number bug_number.

       package Display the bugs for the package package.

       src:package
               Display the bugs for the source package package.

       maintainer
               Display the bugs for the maintainer email address
               maintainer.

       from:submitter
               Display the bugs for the submitter email address submitter.

       tag:tag Display the bugs which are tagged with tag.

       usertag:tag
               Display the bugs which are tagged with usertag tag.  See
               the BTS documentation for more information on usertags.
               This will require the use of a users=email option.

       :       Details of the bug tracking system itself, along with a
               bug-request page with more options than this script, can be
               found on https://bugs.debian.org/.  This page itself will
               be opened if the command 'bts bugs :' is used.

       release-critical, RC
               Display the front page of the release-critical pages on the
               BTS.  This is a synonym for
               https://bugs.debian.org/release-critical/index.html.  It is
               also possible to say release-critical/debian/main.html and
               the like.  RC is a synonym for
               release-critical/other/all.html.

       After the argument specifying what to display, you can optionally
       specify options to use to format the page or change what it
       displayed.  These are passed to the BTS in the URL downloaded. For
       example, pass dist=stable to see bugs affecting the stable version
       of a package, version=1.0 to see bugs affecting that version of a
       package, or reverse=yes to display newest messages first in a bug
       log.

       If caching has been enabled (that is, --no-cache has not been used,
       and BTS_CACHE has not been set to no), then any page requested by
       bts show will automatically be cached, and be available offline
       thereafter.  Pages which are automatically cached in this way will
       be deleted on subsequent "bts show|bugs|cache" invocations if they
       have not been accessed in 30 days.  Warning: on a filesystem
       mounted with the "noatime" option, running "bts show|bugs" does not
       update the cache files' access times; a cached bug will then be
       subject to auto-cleaning 30 days after its initial download, even
       if it has been accessed in the meantime.

       Any other bts commands following this on the command line will be
       executed after the browser has been exited.

       The desired browser can be specified and configured by setting the
       BROWSER environment variable.  The conventions follow those defined
       by Eric Raymond at http://www.catb.org/~esr/BROWSER/; we here
       reproduce the relevant part.

       The value of BROWSER may consist of a colon-separated series of
       browser command parts. These should be tried in order until one
       succeeds. Each command part may optionally contain the string %s;
       if it does, the URL to be viewed is substituted there. If a command
       part does not contain %s, the browser is to be launched as if the
       URL had been supplied as its first argument. The string %% must be
       substituted as a single %.

       Rationale: We need to be able to specify multiple browser commands
       so programs obeying this convention can do the right thing in
       either X or console environments, trying X first. Specifying
       multiple commands may also be useful for people who share files
       like .profile across multiple systems. We need %s because some
       popular browsers have remote-invocation syntax that requires it.
       Unless %% reduces to %, it won't be possible to have a literal %s
       in the string.

       For example, on most Linux systems a good thing to do would be:

       BROWSER='mozilla -raise -remote "openURL(%s,new-window)":links'

   select [key:value ...]
       Uses the SOAP interface to output a list of bugs which match the
       given selection requirements.

       The following keys are allowed, and may be given multiple times.

       package Binary package name.

       source  Source package name.

       maintainer
               E-mail address of the maintainer.

       submitter
               E-mail address of the submitter.

       severity
               Bug severity.

       status  Status of the bug.  One of open, done, or forwarded.

       tag     Tags applied to the bug. If users is specified, may include
               usertags in addition to the standard tags.

       owner   Bug's owner.

       correspondent
               Address of someone who sent mail to the log.

       affects Bugs which affect this package.

       bugs    List of bugs to search within.

       users   Users to use when looking up usertags.

       archive Whether to search archived bugs or normal bugs; defaults to
               0 (i.e. only search normal bugs). As a special case, if
               archive is both, both archived and unarchived bugs are
               returned.

       For example, to select the set of bugs submitted by
       jrandomdeveloper@example.com and tagged wontfix, one would use

       bts select submitter:jrandomdeveloper@example.com tag:wontfix

       If a key is used multiple times then the set of bugs selected
       includes those matching any of the supplied values; for example

       bts select package:foo severity:wishlist severity:minor

       returns all bugs of package foo with either wishlist or minor
       severity.

   status [bug | file:file | fields:field[,field ...] | verbose] ...
       Uses the SOAP interface to output status information for the given
       bugs (or as read from the listed files -- use - to indicate STDIN).

       By default, all populated fields for a bug are displayed.

       If verbose is given, empty fields will also be displayed.

       If fields is given, only those fields will be displayed.  No
       validity checking is performed on any specified fields.

   clone bug new_ID [new_ID ...]
       The clone control command allows you to duplicate a bug report. It
       is useful in the case where a single report actually indicates that
       multiple distinct bugs have occurred. "New IDs" are negative
       numbers, separated by spaces, which may be used in subsequent
       control commands to refer to the newly duplicated bugs.  A new
       report is generated for each new ID.

   done bug [version]
       Mark a bug as Done. This forces interactive mode since done
       messages should include an explanation why the bug is being closed.
       You should specify which version of the package closed the bug, if
       possible.

   reopen bug [submitter]
       Reopen a bug, with optional submitter.

   archive bug
       Archive a bug that has previously been archived but is currently
       not.  The bug must fulfil all of the requirements for archiving
       with the exception of those that are time-based.

   unarchive bug
       Unarchive a bug that is currently archived.

   retitle bug title
       Change the title of the bug.

   summary bug [messagenum]
       Select a message number that should be used as the summary of a
       bug.

       If no message number is given, the summary is cleared.

   submitter bug [bug ...] submitter-email
       Change the submitter address of a bug or a number of bugs, with !
       meaning `use the address on the current email as the new submitter
       address'.

   reassign bug [bug ...] package [version]
       Reassign a bug or a number of bugs to a different package.  The
       version field is optional; see the explanation at
       <https://www.debian.org/Bugs/server-control>.

   found bug [version]
       Indicate that a bug was found to exist in a particular package
       version.  Without version, the list of fixed versions is cleared
       and the bug is reopened.

   notfound bug version
       Remove the record that bug was encountered in the given version of
       the package to which it is assigned.

   fixed bug version
       Indicate that a bug was fixed in a particular package version,
       without affecting the bug's open/closed status.

   notfixed bug version
       Remove the record that a bug was fixed in the given version of the
       package to which it is assigned.

       This is equivalent to the sequence of commands "found bug version",
       "notfound bug version".

   block bug by|with bug [bug ...]
       Note that a bug is blocked from being fixed by a set of other bugs.

   unblock bug by|with bug [bug ...]
       Note that a bug is no longer blocked from being fixed by a set of
       other bugs.

   merge bug bug [bug ...]
       Merge a set of bugs together.

   forcemerge bug bug [bug ...]
       Forcibly merge a set of bugs together. The first bug listed is the
       master bug, and its settings (those which must be equal in a normal
       merge) are assigned to the bugs listed next.

   unmerge bug
       Unmerge a bug.

   tag bug [+|-|=] tag [tag ...]
   tags bug [+|-|=] tag [tag ...]
       Set or unset a tag on a bug. The tag may either be the exact tag
       name or it may be abbreviated to any unique tag substring. (So
       using fixed will set the tag fixed, not fixed-upstream, for
       example, but fix would not be acceptable.) Multiple tags may be
       specified as well. The two commands (tag and tags) are identical.
       At least one tag must be specified, unless the = flag is used,
       where the command

         bts tags <bug> =

       will remove all tags from the specified bug.

       Adding/removing the security tag will add
       "team\@security.debian.org" to the Cc list of the control email.

   affects bug [+|-|=] package [package ...]
       Indicates that a bug affects a package other than that against
       which it is filed, causing the bug to be listed by default in the
       package list of the other package.  This should generally be used
       where the bug is severe enough to cause multiple reports from users
       to be assigned to the wrong package.  At least one package must be
       specified, unless the = flag is used, where the command

         bts affects <bug> =

       will remove all indications that bug affects other packages.

   user email
       Specify a user email address before using the usertags command.

   usertag bug [+|-|=] tag [tag ...]
   usertags bug [+|-|=] tag [tag ...]
       Set or unset a user tag on a bug. The tag must be the exact tag
       name wanted; there are no defaults or checking of tag names.
       Multiple tags may be specified as well. The two commands (usertag
       and usertags) are identical.  At least one tag must be specified,
       unless the = flag is used, where the command

         bts usertags <bug> =

       will remove all user tags from the specified bug.

   claim bug [claim]
       Record that you have claimed a bug (e.g. for a bug squashing
       party).  claim should be a unique token allowing the bugs you have
       claimed to be identified; an e-mail address is often used.

       If no claim is specified, the environment variable DEBEMAIL or
       EMAIL (checked in that order) is used.

   unclaim bug [claim]
       Remove the record that you have claimed a bug.

       If no claim is specified, the environment variable DEBEMAIL or
       EMAIL (checked in that order) is used.

   severity bug severity
       Change the severity of a bug. Available severities are: wishlist,
       minor, normal, important, serious, grave, critical. The severity
       may be abbreviated to any unique substring.

   forwarded bug address
       Mark the bug as forwarded to the given address (usually an email
       address or a URL for an upstream bug tracker).

   notforwarded bug
       Mark a bug as not forwarded.

   package [package ...]
       The following commands will only apply to bugs against the listed
       packages; this acts as a safety mechanism for the BTS.  If no
       packages are listed, this check is turned off again.

   limit [key[:value]] ...
       The following commands will only apply to bugs which meet the
       specified criterion; this acts as a safety mechanism for the BTS.
       If no values are listed, the limits for that key are turned off
       again.  If no keys are specified, all limits are reset.

       submitter
               E-mail address of the submitter.

       date    Date the bug was submitted.

       subject Subject of the bug.

       msgid   Message-id of the initial bug report.

       package Binary package name.

       source  Source package name.

       tag     Tags applied to the bug.

       severity
               Bug severity.

       owner   Bug's owner.

       affects Bugs affecting this package.

       archive Whether to search archived bugs or normal bugs; defaults to
               0 (i.e. only search normal bugs). As a special case, if
               archive is both, both archived and unarchived bugs are
               returned.

       For example, to limit the set of bugs affected by the subsequent
       control commands to those submitted by jrandomdeveloper@example.com
       and tagged wontfix, one would use

       bts limit submitter:jrandomdeveloper@example.com tag:wontfix

       If a key is used multiple times then the set of bugs selected
       includes those matching any of the supplied values; for example

       bts limit package:foo severity:wishlist severity:minor

       only applies the subsequent control commands to bugs of package foo
       with either wishlist or minor severity.

   owner bug owner-email
       Change the "owner" address of a bug, with ! meaning `use the
       address on the current email as the new owner address'.

       The owner of a bug accepts responsibility for dealing with it.

   noowner bug
       Mark a bug as having no "owner".

   subscribe bug [email]
       Subscribe the given email address to the specified bug report.  If
       no email address is specified, the environment variable DEBEMAIL or
       EMAIL (in that order) is used.  If those are not set, or ! is given
       as email address, your default address will be used.

       After executing this command, you will be sent a subscription
       confirmation to which you have to reply.  When subscribed to a bug
       report, you receive all relevant emails and notifications.  Use the
       unsubscribe command to unsubscribe.

   unsubscribe bug [email]
       Unsubscribe the given email address from the specified bug report.
       As with subscribe above, if no email address is specified, the
       environment variables DEBEMAIL or EMAIL (in that order) is used.
       If those are not set, or ! is given as email address, your default
       address will be used.

       After executing this command, you will be sent an unsubscription
       confirmation to which you have to reply. Use the subscribe command
       to, well, subscribe.

   reportspam bug ...
       The reportspam command allows you to report a bug report as
       containing spam.  It saves one from having to go to the bug web
       page to do so.

   spamreport bug ...
       spamreport is a synonym for reportspam.

   cache [options] [maint_email | pkg | src:pkg | from:submitter]
   cache [options] [release-critical | release-critical/... | RC]
       Generate or update a cache of bug reports for the given email
       address or package. By default it downloads all bugs belonging to
       the email address in the DEBEMAIL environment variable (or the
       EMAIL environment variable if DEBEMAIL is unset). This command may
       be repeated to cache bugs belonging to several people or packages.
       If multiple packages or addresses are supplied, bugs belonging to
       any of the arguments will be cached; those belonging to more than
       one of the arguments will only be downloaded once. The cached bugs
       are stored in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/devscripts/bts/ or, if XDG_CACHE_HOME
       is not set, in ~/.cache/devscripts/bts/.

       You can use the cached bugs with the -o switch. For example:

         bts -o bugs
         bts -o show 12345

       Also, bts will update the files in it in a piecemeal fashion as it
       downloads information from the BTS using the show command. You
       might thus set up the cache, and update the whole thing once a
       week, while letting the automatic cache updates update the bugs you
       frequently refer to during the week.

       Some options affect the behaviour of the cache command.  The first
       is the setting of --cache-mode, which controls how much bts
       downloads of the referenced links from the bug page, including
       boring bits such as the acknowledgement emails, emails to the
       control bot, and the mbox version of the bug report.  It can take
       three values: min (the minimum), mbox (download the minimum plus
       the mbox version of the bug report) or full (the whole works).  The
       second is --force-refresh or -f, which forces the download, even if
       the cached bug report is up-to-date.  The --include-resolved option
       indicates whether bug reports marked as resolved should be
       downloaded during caching.

       Each of these is configurable from the configuration file, as
       described below.  They may also be specified after the cache
       command as well as at the start of the command line.

       Finally, -q or --quiet will suppress messages about caches being
       up-to-date, and giving the option twice will suppress all cache
       messages (except for error messages).

       Beware of caching RC, though: it will take a LONG time!  (With
       1000+ RC bugs and a delay of 5 seconds between bugs, you're looking
       at a minimum of 1.5 hours, and probably significantly more than
       that.)

   cleancache package | src:package | maintainer
   cleancache from:submitter | tag:tag | usertag:tag | number | ALL
       Clean the cache for the specified package, maintainer, etc., as
       described above for the bugs command, or clean the entire cache if
       ALL is specified. This is useful if you are going to have permanent
       network access or if the database has become corrupted for some
       reason.  Note that for safety, this command does not default to the
       value of DEBEMAIL or EMAIL.

   listcachedbugs [number]
       List cached bug ids (intended to support bash completion). The
       optional number argument restricts the list to those bug ids that
       start with that number.

   version
       Display version and copyright information.

   help
       Display a short summary of commands, suspiciously similar to parts
       of this man page.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

   DEBEMAIL
       If this is set, the From: line in the email will be set to use this
       email address instead of your normal email address (as would be
       determined by mail).

   DEBFULLNAME
       If DEBEMAIL is set, DEBFULLNAME is examined to determine the full
       name to use; if this is not set, bts attempts to determine a name
       from your passwd entry.

   BROWSER
       If set, it specifies the browser to use for the show and bugs
       options.  See the description above.

CONFIGURATION VARIABLES

   The two configuration files /etc/devscripts.conf and ~/.devscripts are
   sourced by a shell in that order to set configuration variables.
   Command line options can be used to override configuration file
   settings.  Environment variable settings are ignored for this purpose.
   The currently recognised variables are:

   BTS_OFFLINE
       If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the --offline command
       line parameter being used.  Only has an effect on the show and bugs
       commands.  The default is no.  See the description of the show
       command above for more information.

   BTS_CACHE
       If this is set to no, then it is the same as the --no-cache command
       line parameter being used.  Only has an effect on the show and bug
       commands.  The default is yes.  Again, see the show command above
       for more information.

   BTS_CACHE_MODE={min,mbox,full}
       How much of the BTS should we mirror when we are asked to cache
       something?  Just the minimum, or also the mbox or the whole thing?
       The default is min, and it has the same meaning as the --cache-mode
       command line parameter.  Only has an effect on the cache.  See the
       cache command for more information.

   BTS_FORCE_REFRESH
       If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the --force-refresh
       command line parameter being used.  Only has an effect on the cache
       command.  The default is no.  See the cache command for more
       information.

   BTS_MAIL_READER
       If this is set, specifies a mail reader to use instead of mutt.
       Same as the --mailreader command line option.

   BTS_SENDMAIL_COMMAND
       If this is set, specifies a sendmail command to use instead of
       /usr/sbin/sendmail.  Same as the --sendmail command line option.

   BTS_ONLY_NEW
       Download only new bugs when caching. Do not check for updates in
       bugs we already have.  The default is no.  Same as the --only-new
       command line option.

   BTS_SMTP_HOST
       If this is set, specifies an SMTP host to use for sending mail
       rather than using the sendmail command.  Same as the --smtp-host
       command line option.

       Note that this option takes priority over BTS_SENDMAIL_COMMAND if
       both are set, unless the --sendmail option is used.

   BTS_SMTP_AUTH_USERNAME, BTS_SMTP_AUTH_PASSWORD
       If these options are set, then it is the same as the
       --smtp-username and --smtp-password options being used.

   BTS_SMTP_HELO
       Same as the --smtp-helo command line option.

   BTS_INCLUDE_RESOLVED
       If this is set to no, then it is the same as the
       --no-include-resolved command line parameter being used.  Only has
       an effect on the cache command.  The default is yes.  See the cache
       command for more information.

   BTS_SUPPRESS_ACKS
       If this is set to yes, then it is the same as the --no-ack command
       line parameter being used.  The default is no.

   BTS_INTERACTIVE
       If this is set to yes or force, then it is the same as the
       --interactive or --force-interactive command line parameter being
       used.  The default is no.

   BTS_DEFAULT_CC
       Specify a list of e-mail addresses to which a carbon copy of the
       generated e-mail to the control bot should automatically be sent.

   BTS_SERVER
       Specify the name of a debbugs server which should be used instead
       of https://bugs.debian.org.

SEE ALSO

   Please see <https://www.debian.org/Bugs/server-control> for more
   details on how to control the BTS using emails and
   <https://www.debian.org/Bugs/> for more information about the BTS.

   querybts(1), reportbug(1), pts-subscribe(1)

COPYRIGHT

   This program is Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by Joey Hess
   <joeyh@debian.org>.  Many modifications have been made, Copyright (C)
   2002-2005 Julian Gilbey <jdg@debian.org> and Copyright (C) 2007 Josh
   Triplett <josh@freedesktop.org>.

   It is licensed under the terms of the GPL, either version 2 of the
   License, or (at your option) any later version.




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