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1 # Acquire additional files in 'update' operations
2
3 The download and verification of data from multiple sources in different
4 compression formats, with partial downloads and patches is an involved
5 process which is hard to implement correctly and securely.
6
7 APT frontends share the code and binaries to make this happen in libapt
8 with the Acquire system, supported by helpers shipped in the apt package
9 itself and additional transports in individual packages like
10 apt-transport-https.
11
12 For its own operation libapt needs or can make use of Packages, Sources
13 and Translation-* files, which it will acquire by default, but
14 a repository might contain more data files (e.g. Contents) a frontend
15 (e.g. apt-file) might want to use and would therefore need to be
16 downloaded as well.
17
18 This file describes the configuration scheme such a frontend can use to
19 instruct the Acquire system to download those additional files.
20
21 # The Configuration Stanza
22
23 The Acquire system uses the same configuration settings to implement the
24 files it downloads by default. These settings are the default, but if
25 they would be written in a configuration file the configuration
26 instructing the Acquire system to download the Packages files would look
27 like this (see also apt.conf(5) manpage for configuration file syntax):
28
29 Acquire::IndexTargets::deb::Packages {
30 MetaKey "$(COMPONENT)/binary-$(ARCHITECTURE)/Packages";
31 ShortDescription "Packages";
32 Description "$(RELEASE)/$(COMPONENT) $(ARCHITECTURE) Packages";
33
34 flatMetaKey "Packages";
35 flatDescription "$(RELEASE) Packages";
36
37 Optional "no";
38 };
39
40 All files which should be downloaded (nicknamed 'Targets') are mentioned
41 below the Acquire::IndexTargets scope. 'deb' is here the type of the
42 sources.list entry the file should be acquired for. The only other
43 supported value is hence 'deb-src'. Beware: You can't specify multiple
44 types here and you can't download the same (evaluated) MetaKey from
45 multiple types!
46
47 After the type you can pick any valid and unique string which preferable
48 refers to the file it downloads (In the example we picked 'Packages').
49 This string is used as identifier for the target class and accessible as
50 'Created-By' e.g. in the "apt-get indextargets" output as detailed
51 below. It is also used to allow user to enable/disable targets per
52 sources.list entry.
53
54 All targets have three main properties you can define:
55 * MetaKey: The identifier of the file to be downloaded as used in the
56 Release file. It is also the relative location of the file from the
57 Release file. You can neither download from a different server
58 entirely (absolute URI) nor access directories above the Release file
59 (e.g. "../../").
60 * ShortDescription: Very short string intended to be displayed to the
61 user e.g. while reporting progress. apt will e.g. use this string in
62 the last line to indicate progress of e.g. the download of a specific
63 item.
64 * Description: A preferable human understandable and readable identifier
65 of which file is acquired exactly. Mainly used for progress reporting
66 and error messages. apt will e.g. use this string in the Get/Hit/Err
67 progress lines.
68 An identifier of the site accessed as seen in the sources.list (e.g.
69 "http://example.org/debian" or "file:/path/to/a/repository") is
70 automatically prefixed for this property.
71
72
73 Additional optional properties:
74 * DefaultEnabled: The default value is 'yes' which means that apt will
75 try to acquire this target from all sources. If set to 'no' the user
76 has to explicitly enable this target in the sources.list file with the
77 Targets option(s) – or override this value in a config file.
78 * Optional: The default value is 'yes' and should be kept at this value.
79 If enabled the acquire system will skip the download if the file isn't
80 mentioned in the Release file. Otherwise this is treated as a hard
81 error and the update process fails. Note that failures while
82 downloading (e.g. 404 or hash verification errors) are failures,
83 regardless of this setting.
84 * KeepCompressed: The default is the value of Acquire::GzipIndexes,
85 which defaults to false. If true, the acquire system will keep the
86 file compressed on disk rather than extract it. If your frontend can't
87 deal with compressed files transparently you have to explicitly set
88 this option to false to avoid problems with users setting the option
89 globally. On the other hand, if you set it to true or don't set it you
90 have to ensure your frontend can deal with all compressed fileformats
91 supported by apt (libapt users can e.g. use FileFd).
92 * flat{MetaKey,Description}: APT supports two types of repositories:
93 dists-style repositories which are the default and by far the most
94 common which are named after the fact that the files are in an
95 elaborated directory structure. In contrast a flat-style repository
96 lumps all files together in one directory. Support for these flat
97 repositories exists mainly for legacy purposes only. It is therefore
98 recommend to not set these values.
99
100
101 The acquire system will automatically choose to download a compressed
102 file if it is available and uncompress it for you, just as it will also
103 use PDiff patching if provided by the repository and enabled by the
104 user. You only have to ensure that the Release file contains the
105 information about the compressed files/PDiffs to make this happen.
106 *NO* properties have to be set to enable this!
107
108
109 More properties exist, but these should *NOT* be set by frontends
110 requesting files. They exist for internal and end-user usage only.
111 Some of these are – which are documented here only to ensure that they
112 aren't accidentally used by frontends:
113 * PDiffs: controls if apt will try to use PDiffs for this target.
114 Defaults to the value of Acquire::PDiffs which is true by default.
115 Can be overridden per-source by the sources.list option of the same
116 name. See the documentation for both of these for details.
117 * CompressionTypes: The default value is a space separated list of
118 compression types supported by apt (see Acquire::CompressionTypes).
119 You can set this option to prevent apt from downloading a compression
120 type a frontend can't open transparently. This should always be
121 a temporary workaround through and a bug should be reported against
122 the frontend in question.
123
124
125 # More examples
126
127 The stanzas for Translation-* files as well as for Sources files would
128 look like this:
129
130 Acquire::IndexTargets {
131 deb::Translations {
132 MetaKey "$(COMPONENT)/i18n/Translation-$(LANGUAGE)";
133 ShortDescription "Translation-$(LANGUAGE)";
134 Description "$(RELEASE)/$(COMPONENT) Translation-$(LANGUAGE)";
135
136 flatMetaKey "$(LANGUAGE)";
137 flatDescription "$(RELEASE) Translation-$(LANGUAGE)";
138 };
139
140 deb-src::Sources {
141 MetaKey "$(COMPONENT)/source/Sources";
142 ShortDescription "Sources";
143 Description "$(RELEASE)/$(COMPONENT) Sources";
144
145 flatMetaKey "Sources";
146 flatDescription "$(RELEASE) Sources";
147
148 Optional "no";
149 };
150 };
151
152 # Substitution variables
153
154 As seen in the examples, properties can contain placeholders filled in
155 by the acquire system. The following variables are known; note that
156 unknown variables have no default value nor are they touched: They are
157 printed as-is.
158
159 * $(RELEASE): This is usually an archive- or codename, e.g. "stable" or
160 "stretch". Note that flat-style repositories do not have an archive-
161 or codename per-se, so the value might very well be just "/" or so.
162 * $(COMPONENT): as given in the sources.list, e.g. "main", "non-free" or
163 "universe". Note that flat-style repositories again do not really
164 have a meaningful value here.
165 * $(LANGUAGE): Values are all entries (expect "none") of configuration
166 option Acquire::Languages, e.g. "en", "de" or "de_AT".
167 * $(ARCHITECTURE): Values are all entries of configuration option
168 APT::Architectures (potentially modified by sources.list options),
169 e.g. "amd64", "i386" or "armel" for the 'deb' type. In type 'deb-src'
170 this variable has the value "source".
171 * $(NATIVE_ARCHITECTURE): The architecture apt treats as the native
172 architecture for this system configured as APT::Architecture
173 defaulting to the architecture apt itself was built for.
174
175 Note that while more variables might exist in the implementation, these
176 are to be considered undefined and their usage strongly discouraged. If
177 you have a need for other variables contact us.
178
179 # Accessing files
180
181 Do NOT hardcode specific file locations, names or compression types in
182 your application! You will notice that the configuration options give
183 you no choice over where the downloaded files will be stored. This is by
184 design so multiple applications can download and use the same file
185 rather than each and every one of them potentially downloads and uses
186 its own copy somewhere on disk.
187
188 "apt-get indextargets" can be used to get the location as well as other
189 information about all files downloaded (aka: you will see Packages,
190 Sources and Translation-* files here as well). Provide a line of the
191 default output format as parameter to filter out all entries which do
192 not have such a line. With --format, you can further more define your
193 own output style. The variables are what you see in the output, just all
194 uppercase and wrapped in $(), as in the configuration file.
195
196 To get all the filenames of all Translation-en files you can e.g. call:
197 apt-get indextargets --format '$(FILENAME)' "Created-By: Translations" "Language: en"
198
199 The line-based filtering and the formating is rather crude and feature-
200 less by design: The default format is Debians standard format deb822 (in
201 particular: Field names are case-insensitive and the order of fields in
202 the stanza is undefined), so instead of apt reimplementing powerful
203 filters and formating for this command, it is recommend to use piping
204 and dedicated tools like 'grep-dctrl' if you need more than the basics
205 provided.
206
207 Accessing this information via libapt is done by reading the
208 sources.lists (pkgSourceList), iterating over the metaIndex objects this
209 creates and calling GetIndexTargets() on them. See the source code of
210 "apt-get indextargets" for a complete example.
211
212 Note that by default targets are not listed if they weren't downloaded.
213 If you want to see all targets, you can use the --no-release-info, which
214 also removes the Codename, Suite, Version, Origin, Label and Trusted
215 fields from the output as these also display data which needs to be
216 downloaded first and could hence be inaccurate [on the pro-side: This
217 mode is faster as it doesn't require a valid binary cache to operate].
218 The most notable difference perhaps is in the Filename field through: By
219 default it indicates an existing file, potentially compressed (Hint:
220 libapt users can use FileFd to open compressed files transparently). In
221 the --no-release-info mode the indicated file doesn't need to exist and
222 it will always refer to an uncompressed file, even if the index would be
223 (or is) stored compressed.
224
225 Remarks on fields only available in (default) --release-info mode:
226 * Trusted: Denotes with a 'yes' or 'no' if the data in this file is
227 authenticated by a trust chain rooted in a trusted gpg key. You should
228 be careful with untrusted data and warn the user if you use it.
229 * Codename, Suite, Version, Origin and Label are fields from the Release
230 file, are only present if they are present in the Release file and
231 contain the same data.
232
233 Remarks on other available fields:
234 * MetaKey, ShortDesc, Description, Site, Release: as defined
235 by the configuration and described further above.
236 * Created-By: configuration entity responsible for this target
237 * Target-Of: type of the sources.list entry
238 * URI, Repo-URI: avoid using. Contains potentially username/password.
239 Prefer 'Site', especially for display.
240 * Optional, DefaultEnabled, KeepCompressed: Decode the options of the
241 same name from the configuration.
242 * Language, Architecture, Component: as defined further above, but with
243 the catch that they might be missing if they don't effect the target
244 (aka: They weren't used while evaluating the MetaKey template).
245
246 Again, additional fields might be visible in certain implementations,
247 but you should avoid using them and instead talk to us about a portable
248 implementation.
249
250 # Multiple applications requiring the same files
251
252 It is highly encouraged that applications talk to each other and to us
253 about which files they require. It is usually best to have a common
254 package ship the configuration needed to get the files, but specific
255 needs might require specific solutions. Again: talk to us.
256
257 Bad things will happen if multiple frontends request the same file(s)
258 via different targets, which is another reason why coordination is very
259 important!
260
261 # Acquiring files not mentioned in the Release file
262
263 You can't. This is by design as these files couldn't be verified to not
264 be modified in transit, corrupted by the download process or simple if
265 they are present at all on the server, which would require apt to probe
266 for them. APT did this in the past for legacy reasons, we do not intend
267 to go back to these dark times.
268
269 This is also why you can't request files from a different server. It
270 would have the additional problem that this server might not even be
271 accessible (e.g. proxy settings) or that local sources (file:/, cdrom:/)
272 start requesting online files…
273
274 In other words: We would be opening Pandora's box.
275
276 # Acquiring files to a specific location on disk
277
278 You can't by design to avoid multiple frontends requesting the same file
279 to be downloaded to multiple different places on (different) disks
280 (among other reasons). See the next point for a solution if you really
281 have to force a specific location by creating symlinks.
282
283 # Post processing the acquired files
284
285 You can't modify the files apt has downloaded as apt keeps state with
286 e.g. the modification times of the files and advanced features like
287 PDiffs break.
288
289 You can however install an APT::Update::Post-Invoke{-Success,} hook
290 script and use them to copy (modified) files to a different location.
291 Use 'apt-get indextargets' (or similar) to get the filenames – do not
292 look into /var/lib/apt/lists directly!
293
294 Please avoid time consuming calculations in the scripts and instead just
295 trigger a background task as there is little to no feedback for the user
296 while hook scripts run.