Added the ability to disable immediate configuration
[ntk/apt.git] / doc / apt.conf.5.yo
1 mailto(apt@packages.debian.org)
2 manpage(apt.conf)(5)(5 Dec 1998)(apt)()
3 manpagename(apt.conf)(configuration file for APT)
4
5 manpagedescription()
6 bf(apt.conf) is the main configuration file for the APT suite of
7 tools, all tools make use of the configuration file and a common command line
8 parser to provide a uniform environment. When an APT tool starts up it will
9 read bf(/etc/apt/apt.conf), then read the configuration specified by the
10 bf($APT_CONFIG) environment variable and then finally apply the command line
11 options to override the configuration directives, possibly loading more
12 config files.
13
14 The configuration file is organized in a tree with options organized into
15 functional groups. Option specification is given with a double colon
16 notation, for instance em(APT::Get::Assume-Yes) is an option within the
17 APT tool group, for the Get tool. Options do not inherit from their parent
18 groups.
19
20 Syntacticly the configuration language is modeled after what the ISC tools
21 such as bind and dhcp use. Each line is of the form
22 quote(APT::Get::Assume-Yes "true";) The trailing semicolon is required and
23 the quotes are optional. A new em(scope) can be opened with curly braces,
24 like:
25 verb(APT {
26 Get {
27 Assume-Yes "true";
28 Fix-Broken "true";
29 };
30 };
31 )
32 with newlines placed to make
33 it more readable. In general the sample configuration file in
34 em(/usr/doc/apt/examples/apt.conf) is a good guide for how it should look.
35
36 manpagesection(The APT Group)
37 This group of options controls general APT behavoir as well as holding the
38 options for all of the tools.
39
40 startdit()
41 dit(bf(Architecture))
42 System Architecture; sets the architecture to use when fetching files and
43 parsing package lists. The internal default is the architecture apt was
44 compiled for.
45
46 dit(bf(Ignore-Hold))
47 Ignore Held packages; This global options causes the problem resolver to
48 ignore held packages in its decision making.
49
50 dit(bf(Immedate-Configure))
51 Disable Immedate Configuration; This dangerous option disables some
52 of APT's ordering code to cause it to make fewer dpkg calls. Doing
53 so may be necessary on some extremely slow single user systems but
54 is very dangerous and may cause package install scripts to fail or worse.
55 Use at your own risk.
56
57 dit(bf(Get))
58 The Get subsection controls the bf(apt-get(8)) tool, please see its
59 documentation for more information about the options here.
60
61 dit(bf(Cache))
62 The Cache subsection controls the bf(apt-cache(8)) tool, please see its
63 documentation for more information about the options here.
64
65 dit(bf(CDROM))
66 The CDROM subsection controls the bf(apt-cdrom(8)) tool, please see its
67 documentation for more information about the options here.
68
69 enddit()
70
71 manpagesection(The Acquire Group)
72 The bf(Acquire) group of options controls the download of packages and the
73 URI handlers.
74
75 startdit()
76 dit(bf(Queue-Mode))
77 Queuing mode; bf(Queue-Mode) can be one of bf(host) or bf(access) which
78 determins how APT parallelizes outgoing connections. bf(host) means that
79 one connection per target host will be opened, bf(access) means that one
80 connection per URI type will be opened.
81
82 dit(bf(Retries))
83 Number of retries to perform. If this is non-zero apt will retry failed
84 files the given number of times.
85
86 dit(bf(http))
87 HTTP URIs; http::Proxy is the default http proxy to use. It is in the standard
88 form of em(http://[[user][:pass]@]host[:port]/). Per host proxies can also
89 be specified by using the form http::Proxy::<host> with the special keyword
90 em(DIRECT) meaning to use no proxies. The em($http_proxy) environment variable
91 will override all settings.
92
93 Three settings are provided for cache control with HTTP/1.1 complient proxy
94 caches. bf(No-Cache) tells the proxy to not used its cached response under
95 any circumstances, bf(Max-Age) is sent only for index files and tells the
96 cache to refresh its object if it is older than the given number of seconds.
97 Debian updates its index files daily so the default is 1 day. bf(No-Store)
98 specifies that the cache should never store this request, it is only
99 set for archive files. This may be usefull to prevent polluting a proxy cache
100 with very large .deb files. Note: Squid 2.0.2 does not support any of
101 these options.
102
103 One setting is provided to control the pipeline depth in cases where the
104 remote server is not RFC conforming or buggy (such as Squid 2.0.2)
105 Acquire::http::Pipeline-Depth can be a value from 0 to 5 indicating how many
106 outstanding requests APT should send.
107
108 dit(bf(cdrom))
109 CDROM URIs; the only setting for CDROM URIs is the mount point, cdrom::Mount
110 which must be the mount point for the CDROM drive as specified in /etc/fstab.
111
112 enddit()
113
114 manpagesection(Directories)
115 The bf(Dir::State) section has directories that pertain to local state
116 information. bf(lists) is the directory to place downloaded package lists
117 in and bf(status) is the name of the dpkg status file. bf(Dir::State)
118 contains the default directory to prefix on all sub items if they do not
119 start with em(/) or em(./). bf(xstatus) and bf(userstatus) are for future
120 use.
121
122 bf(Dir::Cache) contains locations pertaining to local cache information, such
123 as the two package caches bf(srcpkgcache) and bf(pkgcache) as well as the
124 location to place downloaded archives, bf(Dir::Cache::archives). Like
125 bf(Dir::State) the default directory is contained in bf(Dir::Cache)
126
127 bf(Dir::Etc) contains the location of configuration files, bd(sourcelist)
128 gives the location of the sourcelist and bf(main) is the default configuration
129 file (setting has no effect)
130
131 Binary programs are pointed to by bf(Dir::Bin). bf(methods) specifies the
132 location of the method handlers and bf(gzip), bf(dpkg), bf(apt-get), and
133 bf(apt-cache) specify the location of the respective programs.
134
135 manpagesection(APT in DSelect)
136 When APT is used as a bf(dselect(8)) method several configuration directives
137 control the default behavoir. These are in the bf(DSelect) section.
138
139 startdit()
140 dit(bf(Clean))
141 Cache Clean mode; this value may be one of always, auto, prompt and never.
142 Currently always and auto are identical but their meanings may diverge in
143 future to have auto only clean useless archives and always clean all archives.
144
145 dit(bf(Options))
146 The contents of this variable is passed to bf(apt-get(8)) as command line
147 options when it is run for the install phase.
148
149 dit(bf(UpdateOptions))
150 The contents of this variable is passed to bf(apt-get(8)) as command line
151 options when it is run for the update phase.
152
153 dit(bf(PromptAfterUpdate))
154 If true the [U]pdate operation in dselect will always prompt to continue.
155 The default is to prompt only on error.
156 enddit()
157
158 manpagesection(Debug Options)
159 Most of the options in the bf(debug) section are not interesting to the
160 normal user, however bf(Debug::pkgProblemResolver) shows interesting
161 output about the decisions dist-upgrade makes. bf(Debug::NoLocking)
162 disables file locking so apt can do some operations as non-root and
163 bf(Debug::pkgDPkgPM) will print out the command line for each dpkg invokation.
164
165 manpagesection(EXAMPLES)
166 bf(/usr/doc/apt/examples/apt.conf) contains a sample configuration file
167 showing the default values for all possible options.
168
169 mapagesection(FILES)
170 /etc/apt/apt.conf
171
172 manpageseealso()
173 apt-cache (8),
174 apt.conf (5)
175
176 manpagebugs()
177 See http://bugs.debian.org/apt. If you wish to report a
178 bug in bf(apt-get), please see bf(/usr/doc/debian/bug-reporting.txt)
179 or the bf(bug(1)) command.
180
181 manpageauthor()
182 apt-get was written by the APT team <apt@packages.debian.org>.