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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="no"?>
2<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4
5<!ENTITY % aptent SYSTEM "apt.ent">
6%aptent;
7
8<!ENTITY % aptverbatiment SYSTEM "apt-verbatim.ent">
9%aptverbatiment;
10
11]>
12
13<refentry>
14
15 <refentryinfo>
16 &apt-author.team;
17 &apt-email;
18 &apt-product;
19 <!-- The last update date -->
20 <date>2012-06-09T00:00:00Z</date>
21 </refentryinfo>
22
23 <refmeta>
24 <refentrytitle>apt_preferences</refentrytitle>
25 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
26 <refmiscinfo class="manual">APT</refmiscinfo>
27 </refmeta>
28
29 <!-- Man page title -->
30 <refnamediv>
31 <refname>apt_preferences</refname>
32 <refpurpose>Preference control file for APT</refpurpose>
33 </refnamediv>
34
35<refsect1>
36<title>Description</title>
37<para>The APT preferences file <filename>/etc/apt/preferences</filename>
38and the fragment files in the <filename>/etc/apt/preferences.d/</filename>
39folder can be used to control which versions of packages will be selected
40for installation.</para>
41
42<para>Several versions of a package may be available for installation when
43the &sources-list; file contains references to more than one distribution
44(for example, <literal>stable</literal> and <literal>testing</literal>).
45APT assigns a priority to each version that is available.
46Subject to dependency constraints, <command>apt-get</command> selects the
47version with the highest priority for installation.
48The APT preferences override the priorities that APT assigns to
49package versions by default, thus giving the user control over which
50one is selected for installation.</para>
51
52<para>Several instances of the same version of a package may be available when
53the &sources-list; file contains references to more than one source.
54In this case <command>apt-get</command> downloads the instance listed
55earliest in the &sources-list; file.
56The APT preferences do not affect the choice of instance, only
57the choice of version.</para>
58
59<para>Preferences are a strong power in the hands of a system administrator
60but they can become also their biggest nightmare if used without care!
61APT will not question the preferences, so wrong settings can
62lead to uninstallable packages or wrong decisions while upgrading packages.
63Even more problems will arise if multiple distribution releases are mixed
64without a good understanding of the following paragraphs.
65Packages included in a specific release aren't tested in (and
66therefore don't always work as expected in) older or newer releases, or
67together with other packages from different releases.
68You have been warned.</para>
69
70<para>Note that the files in the <filename>/etc/apt/preferences.d</filename>
71directory are parsed in alphanumeric ascending order and need to obey the
72following naming convention: The files have either no or "<literal>pref</literal>"
73as filename extension and only contain alphanumeric, hyphen (-),
74underscore (_) and period (.) characters.
75Otherwise APT will print a notice that it has ignored a file, unless that
76file matches a pattern in the <literal>Dir::Ignore-Files-Silently</literal>
77configuration list - in which case it will be silently ignored.</para>
78
79<refsect2><title>APT's Default Priority Assignments</title>
80
81<para>If there is no preferences file or if there is no entry in the file
82that applies to a particular version then the priority assigned to that
83version is the priority of the distribution to which that version
84belongs. It is possible to single out a distribution, "the target release",
85which receives a higher priority than other distributions do by default.
86The target release can be set on the <command>apt-get</command> command
87line or in the APT configuration file <filename>/etc/apt/apt.conf</filename>.
88Note that this has precedence over any general priority you set in the
89<filename>/etc/apt/preferences</filename> file described later, but not
90over specifically pinned packages.
91For example,
92
93<programlisting>
94<command>apt-get install -t testing <replaceable>some-package</replaceable></command>
95</programlisting>
96<programlisting>
97APT::Default-Release "stable";
98</programlisting>
99</para>
100
101<para>If the target release has been specified then APT uses the following
102algorithm to set the priorities of the versions of a package. Assign:
103
104<variablelist>
105<varlistentry>
106<term>priority 1</term>
107<listitem><simpara>to the versions coming from archives which in their <filename>Release</filename>
108files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" but <emphasis>not</emphasis> as "ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes"
109like the Debian <literal>experimental</literal> archive.</simpara></listitem>
110</varlistentry>
111
112<varlistentry>
113<term>priority 100</term>
114<listitem><simpara>to the version that is already installed (if any) and to the versions coming
115from archives which in their <filename>Release</filename> files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" and
116"ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes" like the Debian backports archive since <literal>squeeze-backports</literal>.
117</simpara></listitem>
118</varlistentry>
119
120<varlistentry>
121<term>priority 500</term>
122<listitem><simpara>to the versions that are not installed and do not belong to the target release.</simpara></listitem>
123</varlistentry>
124
125<varlistentry>
126<term>priority 990</term>
127<listitem><simpara>to the versions that are not installed and belong to the target release.</simpara></listitem>
128</varlistentry>
129</variablelist>
130</para>
131
132<para>If the target release has not been specified then APT simply assigns
133priority 100 to all installed package versions and priority 500 to all
134uninstalled package versions, except versions coming from archives which
135in their <filename>Release</filename> files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" -
136these versions get the priority 1 or priority 100 if it is additionally marked
137as "ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes".</para>
138
139<para>APT then applies the following rules, listed in order of precedence,
140to determine which version of a package to install.
141<itemizedlist>
142<listitem><simpara>Never downgrade unless the priority of an available
143version exceeds 1000. ("Downgrading" is installing a less recent version
144of a package in place of a more recent version. Note that none of APT's
145default priorities exceeds 1000; such high priorities can only be set in
146the preferences file. Note also that downgrading a package
147can be risky.)</simpara></listitem>
148<listitem><simpara>Install the highest priority version.</simpara></listitem>
149<listitem><simpara>If two or more versions have the same priority,
150install the most recent one (that is, the one with the higher version
151number).</simpara></listitem>
152<listitem><simpara>If two or more versions have the same priority and
153version number but either the packages differ in some of their metadata or the
154<literal>--reinstall</literal> option is given, install the uninstalled one.</simpara></listitem>
155</itemizedlist>
156</para>
157
158<para>In a typical situation, the installed version of a package (priority 100)
159is not as recent as one of the versions available from the sources listed in
160the &sources-list; file (priority 500 or 990). Then the package will be upgraded
161when <command>apt-get install <replaceable>some-package</replaceable></command>
162or <command>apt-get upgrade</command> is executed.
163</para>
164
165<para>More rarely, the installed version of a package is <emphasis>more</emphasis> recent
166than any of the other available versions. The package will not be downgraded
167when <command>apt-get install <replaceable>some-package</replaceable></command>
168or <command>apt-get upgrade</command> is executed.</para>
169
170<para>Sometimes the installed version of a package is more recent than the
171version belonging to the target release, but not as recent as a version
172belonging to some other distribution. Such a package will indeed be upgraded
173when <command>apt-get install <replaceable>some-package</replaceable></command>
174or <command>apt-get upgrade</command> is executed,
175because at least <emphasis>one</emphasis> of the available versions has a higher
176priority than the installed version.</para>
177</refsect2>
178
179<refsect2><title>The Effect of APT Preferences</title>
180
181<para>The APT preferences file allows the system administrator to control the
182assignment of priorities. The file consists of one or more multi-line records
183separated by blank lines. Records can have one of two forms, a specific form
184and a general form.
185<itemizedlist>
186<listitem>
187<simpara>The specific form assigns a priority (a "Pin-Priority") to one or more
188specified packages with a specified version or version range. For example,
189the following record assigns a high priority to all versions of
190the <filename>perl</filename> package whose version number begins with "<literal>&good-perl;</literal>".
191Multiple packages can be separated by spaces.</simpara>
192
193<programlisting>
194Package: perl
195Pin: version &good-perl;*
196Pin-Priority: 1001
197</programlisting>
198</listitem>
199
200<listitem><simpara>The general form assigns a priority to all of the package versions in a
201given distribution (that is, to all the versions of packages that are
202listed in a certain <filename>Release</filename> file) or to all of the package
203versions coming from a particular Internet site, as identified by the
204site's fully qualified domain name.</simpara>
205
206<simpara>This general-form entry in the APT preferences file applies only
207to groups of packages. For example, the following record assigns a high
208priority to all package versions available from the local site.</simpara>
209
210<programlisting>
211Package: *
212Pin: origin ""
213Pin-Priority: 999
214</programlisting>
215
216<simpara>A note of caution: the keyword used here is "<literal>origin</literal>"
217which can be used to match a hostname. The following record will assign a high priority
218to all versions available from the server identified by the hostname "ftp.de.debian.org"</simpara>
219<programlisting>
220Package: *
221Pin: origin "ftp.de.debian.org"
222Pin-Priority: 999
223</programlisting>
224<simpara>This should <emphasis>not</emphasis> be confused with the Origin of a distribution as
225specified in a <filename>Release</filename> file. What follows the "Origin:" tag
226in a <filename>Release</filename> file is not an Internet address
227but an author or vendor name, such as "Debian" or "Ximian".</simpara>
228
229<simpara>The following record assigns a low priority to all package versions
230belonging to any distribution whose Archive name is "<literal>unstable</literal>".</simpara>
231
232<programlisting>
233Package: *
234Pin: release a=unstable
235Pin-Priority: 50
236</programlisting>
237
238<simpara>The following record assigns a high priority to all package versions
239belonging to any distribution whose Codename is "<literal>&testing-codename;</literal>".</simpara>
240
241<programlisting>
242Package: *
243Pin: release n=&testing-codename;
244Pin-Priority: 900
245</programlisting>
246
247<simpara>The following record assigns a high priority to all package versions
248belonging to any release whose Archive name is "<literal>stable</literal>"
249and whose release Version number is "<literal>&stable-version;</literal>".</simpara>
250
251<programlisting>
252Package: *
253Pin: release a=stable, v=&stable-version;
254Pin-Priority: 500
255</programlisting>
256</listitem>
257</itemizedlist>
258</para>
259
260</refsect2>
261
262<refsect2><title>Regular expressions and &glob; syntax</title>
263<para>
264APT also supports pinning by &glob; expressions, and regular
265expressions surrounded by slashes. For example, the following
266example assigns the priority 500 to all packages from
267experimental where the name starts with gnome (as a &glob;-like
268expression) or contains the word kde (as a POSIX extended regular
269expression surrounded by slashes).
270</para>
271
272<programlisting>
273Package: gnome* /kde/
274Pin: release n=experimental
275Pin-Priority: 500
276</programlisting>
277
278<para>
279The rule for those expressions is that they can occur anywhere
280where a string can occur. Thus, the following pin assigns the
281priority 990 to all packages from a release starting with &ubuntu-codename;.
282</para>
283
284<programlisting>
285Package: *
286Pin: release n=&ubuntu-codename;*
287Pin-Priority: 990
288</programlisting>
289
290<para>
291If a regular expression occurs in a <literal>Package</literal> field,
292the behavior is the same as if this regular expression were replaced
293with a list of all package names it matches. It is undecided whether
294this will change in the future; thus you should always list wild-card
295pins first, so later specific pins override it.
296
297The pattern "<literal>*</literal>" in a Package field is not considered
298a &glob; expression in itself.
299</para>
300</refsect2>
301
302
303
304
305
306<refsect2>
307<title>How APT Interprets Priorities</title>
308
309<para>
310Priorities (P) assigned in the APT preferences file must be positive
311or negative integers. They are interpreted as follows (roughly speaking):
312
313<variablelist>
314<varlistentry>
315<term>P &gt;= 1000</term>
316<listitem><simpara>causes a version to be installed even if this
317constitutes a downgrade of the package</simpara></listitem>
318</varlistentry>
319<varlistentry>
320<term>990 &lt;= P &lt; 1000</term>
321<listitem><simpara>causes a version to be installed
322even if it does not come from the target release,
323unless the installed version is more recent</simpara></listitem>
324</varlistentry>
325<varlistentry>
326<term>500 &lt;= P &lt; 990</term>
327<listitem><simpara>causes a version to be installed
328unless there is a version available belonging to the target release
329or the installed version is more recent</simpara></listitem>
330</varlistentry>
331<varlistentry>
332<term>100 &lt;= P &lt; 500</term>
333<listitem><simpara>causes a version to be installed
334unless there is a version available belonging to some other
335distribution or the installed version is more recent</simpara></listitem>
336</varlistentry>
337<varlistentry>
338<term>0 &lt; P &lt; 100</term>
339<listitem><simpara>causes a version to be installed
340only if there is no installed version of the package</simpara></listitem>
341</varlistentry>
342<varlistentry>
343<term>P &lt; 0</term>
344<listitem><simpara>prevents the version from being installed</simpara></listitem>
345</varlistentry>
346</variablelist>
347</para>
348
349<para>If any specific-form records match an available package version then the
350first such record determines the priority of the package version.
351Failing that,
352if any general-form records match an available package version then the
353first such record determines the priority of the package version.</para>
354
355<para>For example, suppose the APT preferences file contains the three
356records presented earlier:</para>
357
358<programlisting>
359Package: perl
360Pin: version &good-perl;*
361Pin-Priority: 1001
362
363Package: *
364Pin: origin ""
365Pin-Priority: 999
366
367Package: *
368Pin: release unstable
369Pin-Priority: 50
370</programlisting>
371
372<para>Then:
373<itemizedlist>
374<listitem><simpara>The most recent available version of the <literal>perl</literal>
375package will be installed, so long as that version's version number begins
376with "<literal>&good-perl;</literal>". If <emphasis>any</emphasis> &good-perl;* version of <literal>perl</literal> is
377available and the installed version is &bad-perl;*, then <literal>perl</literal> will be
378downgraded.</simpara></listitem>
379<listitem><simpara>A version of any package other than <literal>perl</literal>
380that is available from the local system has priority over other versions,
381even versions belonging to the target release.
382</simpara></listitem>
383<listitem><simpara>A version of a package whose origin is not the local
384system but some other site listed in &sources-list; and which belongs to
385an <literal>unstable</literal> distribution is only installed if it is selected
386for installation and no version of the package is already installed.
387</simpara></listitem>
388</itemizedlist>
389</para>
390</refsect2>
391
392<refsect2>
393<title>Determination of Package Version and Distribution Properties</title>
394
395<para>The locations listed in the &sources-list; file should provide
396<filename>Packages</filename> and <filename>Release</filename> files
397to describe the packages available at that location. </para>
398
399<para>The <filename>Packages</filename> file is normally found in the directory
400<filename>.../dists/<replaceable>dist-name</replaceable>/<replaceable>component</replaceable>/<replaceable>arch</replaceable></filename>:
401for example, <filename>.../dists/stable/main/binary-i386/Packages</filename>.
402It consists of a series of multi-line records, one for each package available
403in that directory. Only two lines in each record are relevant for setting
404APT priorities:
405<variablelist>
406<varlistentry>
407<term>the <literal>Package:</literal> line</term>
408<listitem><simpara>gives the package name</simpara></listitem>
409</varlistentry>
410<varlistentry>
411<term>the <literal>Version:</literal> line</term>
412<listitem><simpara>gives the version number for the named package</simpara></listitem>
413</varlistentry>
414</variablelist>
415</para>
416
417<para>The <filename>Release</filename> file is normally found in the directory
418<filename>.../dists/<replaceable>dist-name</replaceable></filename>:
419for example, <filename>.../dists/stable/Release</filename>,
420or <filename>.../dists/&stable-codename;/Release</filename>.
421It consists of a single multi-line record which applies to <emphasis>all</emphasis> of
422the packages in the directory tree below its parent. Unlike the
423<filename>Packages</filename> file, nearly all of the lines in a <filename>Release</filename>
424file are relevant for setting APT priorities:
425
426<variablelist>
427<varlistentry>
428<term>the <literal>Archive:</literal> or <literal>Suite:</literal> line</term>
429<listitem><simpara>names the archive to which all the packages
430in the directory tree belong. For example, the line
431"Archive: stable" or
432"Suite: stable"
433specifies that all of the packages in the directory
434tree below the parent of the <filename>Release</filename> file are in a
435<literal>stable</literal> archive. Specifying this value in the APT preferences file
436would require the line:
437</simpara>
438<programlisting>
439Pin: release a=stable
440</programlisting>
441</listitem>
442</varlistentry>
443
444<varlistentry>
445<term>the <literal>Codename:</literal> line</term>
446<listitem><simpara>names the codename to which all the packages
447in the directory tree belong. For example, the line
448"Codename: &testing-codename;"
449specifies that all of the packages in the directory
450tree below the parent of the <filename>Release</filename> file belong to a version named
451<literal>&testing-codename;</literal>. Specifying this value in the APT preferences file
452would require the line:
453</simpara>
454<programlisting>
455Pin: release n=&testing-codename;
456</programlisting>
457</listitem>
458</varlistentry>
459
460<varlistentry>
461<term>the <literal>Version:</literal> line</term>
462<listitem><simpara>names the release version. For example, the
463packages in the tree might belong to Debian release
464version &stable-version;. Note that there is normally no version number for the
465<literal>testing</literal> and <literal>unstable</literal> distributions because they
466have not been released yet. Specifying this in the APT preferences
467file would require one of the following lines.
468</simpara>
469
470<programlisting>
471Pin: release v=&stable-version;
472Pin: release a=stable, v=&stable-version;
473Pin: release &stable-version;
474</programlisting>
475
476</listitem>
477</varlistentry>
478
479<varlistentry>
480<term>the <literal>Component:</literal> line</term>
481<listitem><simpara>names the licensing component associated with the
482packages in the directory tree of the <filename>Release</filename> file.
483For example, the line "Component: main" specifies that
484all the packages in the directory tree are from the <literal>main</literal>
485component, which entails that they are licensed under terms listed
486in the Debian Free Software Guidelines. Specifying this component
487in the APT preferences file would require the line:
488</simpara>
489<programlisting>
490Pin: release c=main
491</programlisting>
492</listitem>
493</varlistentry>
494
495<varlistentry>
496<term>the <literal>Origin:</literal> line</term>
497<listitem><simpara>names the originator of the packages in the
498directory tree of the <filename>Release</filename> file. Most commonly, this is
499<literal>Debian</literal>. Specifying this origin in the APT preferences file
500would require the line:
501</simpara>
502<programlisting>
503Pin: release o=Debian
504</programlisting>
505</listitem>
506</varlistentry>
507
508<varlistentry>
509<term>the <literal>Label:</literal> line</term>
510<listitem><simpara>names the label of the packages in the directory tree
511of the <filename>Release</filename> file. Most commonly, this is
512<literal>Debian</literal>. Specifying this label in the APT preferences file
513would require the line:
514</simpara>
515<programlisting>
516Pin: release l=Debian
517</programlisting>
518</listitem>
519</varlistentry>
520</variablelist>
521</para>
522
523<para>All of the <filename>Packages</filename> and <filename>Release</filename>
524files retrieved from locations listed in the &sources-list; file are stored
525in the directory <filename>/var/lib/apt/lists</filename>, or in the file named
526by the variable <literal>Dir::State::Lists</literal> in the <filename>apt.conf</filename> file.
527For example, the file
528<filename>debian.lcs.mit.edu_debian_dists_unstable_contrib_binary-i386_Release</filename>
529contains the <filename>Release</filename> file retrieved from the site
530<literal>debian.lcs.mit.edu</literal> for <literal>binary-i386</literal> architecture
531files from the <literal>contrib</literal> component of the <literal>unstable</literal>
532distribution.</para>
533</refsect2>
534
535<refsect2>
536<title>Optional Lines in an APT Preferences Record</title>
537
538<para>Each record in the APT preferences file can optionally begin with
539one or more lines beginning with the word <literal>Explanation:</literal>.
540This provides a place for comments.</para>
541</refsect2>
542</refsect1>
543
544<refsect1>
545<title>Examples</title>
546<refsect2>
547<title>Tracking Stable</title>
548
549<para>The following APT preferences file will cause APT to assign a
550priority higher than the default (500) to all package versions belonging
551to a <literal>stable</literal> distribution and a prohibitively low priority to
552package versions belonging to other <literal>Debian</literal> distributions.
553
554<programlisting>
555Explanation: Uninstall or do not install any Debian-originated
556Explanation: package versions other than those in the stable distro
557Package: *
558Pin: release a=stable
559Pin-Priority: 900
560
561Package: *
562Pin: release o=Debian
563Pin-Priority: -10
564</programlisting>
565</para>
566
567<para>With a suitable &sources-list; file and the above preferences file,
568any of the following commands will cause APT to upgrade to the
569latest <literal>stable</literal> version(s).
570
571<programlisting>
572apt-get install <replaceable>package-name</replaceable>
573apt-get upgrade
574apt-get dist-upgrade
575</programlisting>
576</para>
577
578<para>The following command will cause APT to upgrade the specified
579package to the latest version from the <literal>testing</literal> distribution;
580the package will not be upgraded again unless this command is given
581again.
582
583<programlisting>
584apt-get install <replaceable>package</replaceable>/testing
585</programlisting>
586</para>
587</refsect2>
588
589 <refsect2>
590 <title>Tracking Testing or Unstable</title>
591
592<para>The following APT preferences file will cause APT to assign
593a high priority to package versions from the <literal>testing</literal>
594distribution, a lower priority to package versions from the
595<literal>unstable</literal> distribution, and a prohibitively low priority
596to package versions from other <literal>Debian</literal> distributions.
597
598<programlisting>
599Package: *
600Pin: release a=testing
601Pin-Priority: 900
602
603Package: *
604Pin: release a=unstable
605Pin-Priority: 800
606
607Package: *
608Pin: release o=Debian
609Pin-Priority: -10
610</programlisting>
611</para>
612
613<para>With a suitable &sources-list; file and the above preferences file,
614any of the following commands will cause APT to upgrade to the latest
615<literal>testing</literal> version(s).
616
617<programlisting>
618apt-get install <replaceable>package-name</replaceable>
619apt-get upgrade
620apt-get dist-upgrade
621</programlisting>
622</para>
623
624<para>The following command will cause APT to upgrade the specified
625package to the latest version from the <literal>unstable</literal> distribution.
626Thereafter, <command>apt-get upgrade</command> will upgrade
627the package to the most recent <literal>testing</literal> version if that is
628more recent than the installed version, otherwise, to the most recent
629<literal>unstable</literal> version if that is more recent than the installed
630version.
631
632<programlisting>
633apt-get install <replaceable>package</replaceable>/unstable
634</programlisting>
635</para>
636</refsect2>
637
638
639<refsect2>
640<title>Tracking the evolution of a codename release</title>
641
642<para>The following APT preferences file will cause APT to assign a
643priority higher than the default (500) to all package versions belonging
644to a specified codename of a distribution and a prohibitively low priority to
645package versions belonging to other <literal>Debian</literal> distributions,
646codenames and archives.
647Note that with this APT preference APT will follow the migration of a release
648from the archive <literal>testing</literal> to <literal>stable</literal> and
649later <literal>oldstable</literal>. If you want to follow for example the progress
650in <literal>testing</literal> notwithstanding the codename changes you should use
651the example configurations above.
652
653<programlisting>
654Explanation: Uninstall or do not install any Debian-originated package versions
655Explanation: other than those in the distribution codenamed with &testing-codename; or sid
656Package: *
657Pin: release n=&testing-codename;
658Pin-Priority: 900
659
660Explanation: Debian unstable is always codenamed with sid
661Package: *
662Pin: release n=sid
663Pin-Priority: 800
664
665Package: *
666Pin: release o=Debian
667Pin-Priority: -10
668</programlisting>
669</para>
670
671<para>With a suitable &sources-list; file and the above preferences file,
672any of the following commands will cause APT to upgrade to the
673latest version(s) in the release codenamed with <literal>&testing-codename;</literal>.
674
675<programlisting>
676apt-get install <replaceable>package-name</replaceable>
677apt-get upgrade
678apt-get dist-upgrade
679</programlisting>
680</para>
681
682<para>The following command will cause APT to upgrade the specified
683package to the latest version from the <literal>sid</literal> distribution.
684Thereafter, <command>apt-get upgrade</command> will upgrade
685the package to the most recent <literal>&testing-codename;</literal> version if that is
686more recent than the installed version, otherwise, to the most recent
687<literal>sid</literal> version if that is more recent than the installed
688version.
689
690<programlisting>
691apt-get install <replaceable>package</replaceable>/sid
692</programlisting>
693</para>
694</refsect2>
695</refsect1>
696
697<refsect1>
698<title>Files</title>
699 <variablelist>
700 &file-preferences;
701 </variablelist>
702</refsect1>
703
704<refsect1>
705<title>See Also</title>
706<para>&apt-get; &apt-cache; &apt-conf; &sources-list;
707</para>
708</refsect1>
709
710 &manbugs;
711
712</refentry>