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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 <!ENTITY % aptent SYSTEM "apt.ent"> %aptent;
5 <!ENTITY % aptverbatiment SYSTEM "apt-verbatim.ent"> %aptverbatiment;
6 <!ENTITY % aptvendor SYSTEM "apt-vendor.ent"> %aptvendor;
7 ]>
8
9 <refentry>
10
11 <refentryinfo>
12 &apt-author.jgunthorpe;
13 &apt-author.team;
14 &apt-email;
15 &apt-product;
16 <!-- The last update date -->
17 <date>2012-06-09T00:00:00Z</date>
18 </refentryinfo>
19
20 <refmeta>
21 <refentrytitle>apt-get</refentrytitle>
22 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
23 <refmiscinfo class="manual">APT</refmiscinfo>
24 </refmeta>
25
26 <!-- Man page title -->
27 <refnamediv>
28 <refname>apt-get</refname>
29 <refpurpose>APT package handling utility -- command-line interface</refpurpose>
30 </refnamediv>
31
32 &synopsis-command-apt-get;
33
34 <refsect1><title>Description</title>
35 <para><command>apt-get</command> is the command-line tool for handling packages, and may be
36 considered the user's "back-end" to other tools using the APT
37 library. Several "front-end" interfaces exist, such as
38 &aptitude;, &synaptic; and &wajig;.</para>
39
40 <para>Unless the <option>-h</option>, or <option>--help</option> option is given, one of the
41 commands below must be present.</para>
42
43 <variablelist>
44 <varlistentry><term><option>update</option></term>
45 <listitem><para><literal>update</literal> is used to resynchronize the package index files from
46 their sources. The indexes of available packages are fetched from the
47 location(s) specified in <filename>/etc/apt/sources.list</filename>.
48 For example, when using a Debian archive, this command retrieves and
49 scans the <filename>Packages.gz</filename> files, so that information about new
50 and updated packages is available. An <literal>update</literal> should always be
51 performed before an <literal>upgrade</literal> or <literal>dist-upgrade</literal>. Please
52 be aware that the overall progress meter will be incorrect as the size
53 of the package files cannot be known in advance.</para></listitem>
54 </varlistentry>
55
56 <varlistentry><term><option>upgrade</option></term>
57 <listitem><para><literal>upgrade</literal> is used to install the newest versions of all packages
58 currently installed on the system from the sources enumerated in
59 <filename>/etc/apt/sources.list</filename>. Packages currently installed with
60 new versions available are retrieved and upgraded; under no circumstances
61 are currently installed packages removed, or packages not already installed
62 retrieved and installed. New versions of currently installed packages that
63 cannot be upgraded without changing the install status of another package
64 will be left at their current version. An <literal>update</literal> must be
65 performed first so that <command>apt-get</command> knows that new versions of packages are
66 available.</para></listitem>
67 </varlistentry>
68
69 <varlistentry><term><option>dist-upgrade</option></term>
70 <listitem><para><literal>dist-upgrade</literal> in addition to performing the function of
71 <literal>upgrade</literal>, also intelligently handles changing dependencies
72 with new versions of packages; <command>apt-get</command> has a "smart" conflict
73 resolution system, and it will attempt to upgrade the most important
74 packages at the expense of less important ones if necessary.
75 The <literal>dist-upgrade</literal> command may therefore remove some packages.
76 The <filename>/etc/apt/sources.list</filename> file contains a list of locations
77 from which to retrieve desired package files.
78 See also &apt-preferences; for a mechanism for
79 overriding the general settings for individual packages.</para></listitem>
80 </varlistentry>
81
82 <varlistentry><term><option>dselect-upgrade</option></term>
83 <listitem><para><literal>dselect-upgrade</literal>
84 is used in conjunction with the traditional Debian packaging
85 front-end, &dselect;. <literal>dselect-upgrade</literal>
86 follows the changes made by &dselect; to the <literal>Status</literal>
87 field of available packages, and performs the actions necessary to realize
88 that state (for instance, the removal of old and the installation of new
89 packages).</para></listitem>
90 </varlistentry>
91
92 <varlistentry><term><option>install</option></term>
93 <listitem>
94 <para><literal>install</literal> is followed by one or more
95 packages desired for installation or upgrading.
96 Each package is a package name, not a fully qualified
97 filename (for instance, in a Debian system,
98 <package>apt-utils</package> would be the argument provided, not
99 <filename>apt-utils_&apt-product-version;_amd64.deb</filename>). All packages required
100 by the package(s) specified for installation will also
101 be retrieved and installed.
102 The <filename>/etc/apt/sources.list</filename> file is
103 used to locate the desired packages. If a hyphen is
104 appended to the package name (with no intervening space),
105 the identified package will be removed if it is installed.
106 Similarly a plus sign can be used to designate a
107 package to install. These latter features may be used
108 to override decisions made by apt-get's conflict
109 resolution system.
110 </para>
111
112 <para>A specific version of a package can be selected for installation by
113 following the package name with an equals and the version of the package
114 to select. This will cause that version to be located and selected for
115 install. Alternatively a specific distribution can be selected by
116 following the package name with a slash and the version of the
117 distribution or the Archive name (stable, testing, unstable).</para>
118
119 <para>Both of the version selection mechanisms can downgrade packages and must
120 be used with care.</para>
121
122 <para>This is also the target to use if you want to upgrade one or
123 more already-installed packages without upgrading every package
124 you have on your system. Unlike the "upgrade" target, which
125 installs the newest version of all currently installed packages,
126 "install" will install the newest version of only the package(s)
127 specified. Simply provide the name of the package(s) you wish
128 to upgrade, and if a newer version is available, it (and its
129 dependencies, as described above) will be downloaded and
130 installed.
131 </para>
132
133 <para>Finally, the &apt-preferences; mechanism allows you to
134 create an alternative installation policy for
135 individual packages.</para>
136
137 <para>If no package matches the given expression and the expression contains one
138 of '.', '?' or '*' then it is assumed to be a POSIX regular expression,
139 and it is applied
140 to all package names in the database. Any matches are then installed (or
141 removed). Note that matching is done by substring so 'lo.*' matches 'how-lo'
142 and 'lowest'. If this is undesired, anchor the regular expression
143 with a '^' or '$' character, or create a more specific regular expression.</para></listitem>
144 </varlistentry>
145
146 <varlistentry><term><option>remove</option></term>
147 <listitem><para><literal>remove</literal> is identical to <literal>install</literal> except that packages are
148 removed instead of installed. Note that removing a package leaves its
149 configuration files on the system. If a plus sign is appended to the package
150 name (with no intervening space), the identified package will be
151 installed instead of removed.</para></listitem>
152 </varlistentry>
153
154 <varlistentry><term><option>purge</option></term>
155 <listitem><para><literal>purge</literal> is identical to <literal>remove</literal> except that packages are
156 removed and purged (any configuration files are deleted too).</para></listitem>
157 </varlistentry>
158
159 <varlistentry><term><option>source</option></term>
160 <listitem><para><literal>source</literal> causes <command>apt-get</command> to fetch source packages. APT
161 will examine the available packages to decide which source package to
162 fetch. It will then find and download into the current directory the
163 newest available version of that source package while respecting the
164 default release, set with the option <literal>APT::Default-Release</literal>,
165 the <option>-t</option> option or per package with the
166 <literal>pkg/release</literal> syntax, if possible.</para>
167
168 <para>Source packages are tracked separately
169 from binary packages via <literal>deb-src</literal> lines
170 in the &sources-list; file. This means that you will need to add such a line
171 for each repository you want to get sources from; otherwise you will probably
172 get either the wrong (too old/too new) source versions or none at all.</para>
173
174 <para>If the <option>--compile</option> option is specified
175 then the package will be compiled to a binary .deb using
176 <command>dpkg-buildpackage</command> for the architecture as
177 defined by the <command>--host-architecture</command> option.
178 If <option>--download-only</option> is specified then the source package
179 will not be unpacked.</para>
180
181 <para>A specific source version can be retrieved by postfixing the source name
182 with an equals and then the version to fetch, similar to the mechanism
183 used for the package files. This enables exact matching of the source
184 package name and version, implicitly enabling the
185 <literal>APT::Get::Only-Source</literal> option.</para>
186
187 <para>Note that source packages are not installed and tracked in the
188 <command>dpkg</command> database like binary packages; they are simply downloaded
189 to the current directory, like source tarballs.</para></listitem>
190 </varlistentry>
191
192 <varlistentry><term><option>build-dep</option></term>
193 <listitem><para><literal>build-dep</literal> causes apt-get to install/remove packages in an
194 attempt to satisfy the build dependencies for a source package. By default the dependencies are
195 satisfied to build the package natively. If desired a host-architecture can be specified
196 with the <option>--host-architecture</option> option instead.</para></listitem>
197 </varlistentry>
198
199 <varlistentry><term><option>check</option></term>
200 <listitem><para><literal>check</literal> is a diagnostic tool; it updates the package cache and checks
201 for broken dependencies.</para></listitem>
202 </varlistentry>
203
204 <varlistentry><term><option>download</option></term>
205 <listitem><para><literal>download</literal> will download the given
206 binary package into the current directory.
207 </para></listitem>
208 </varlistentry>
209
210 <varlistentry><term><option>clean</option></term>
211 <listitem><para><literal>clean</literal> clears out the local repository of retrieved package
212 files. It removes everything but the lock file from
213 <filename>&cachedir;/archives/</filename> and
214 <filename>&cachedir;/archives/partial/</filename>.</para></listitem>
215 </varlistentry>
216
217 <varlistentry><term><option>autoclean</option></term>
218 <listitem><para>Like <literal>clean</literal>, <literal>autoclean</literal> clears out the local
219 repository of retrieved package files. The difference is that it only
220 removes package files that can no longer be downloaded, and are largely
221 useless. This allows a cache to be maintained over a long period without
222 it growing out of control. The configuration option
223 <literal>APT::Clean-Installed</literal> will prevent installed packages from being
224 erased if it is set to off.</para></listitem>
225 </varlistentry>
226
227 <varlistentry><term><option>autoremove</option></term>
228 <listitem><para><literal>autoremove</literal> is used to remove packages that were automatically
229 installed to satisfy dependencies for other packages and are now no longer needed.</para></listitem>
230 </varlistentry>
231
232 <varlistentry><term><option>changelog</option></term>
233 <listitem><para><literal>changelog</literal> tries to download the
234 changelog of a package and displays it through
235 <command>sensible-pager</command>. By default it
236 displays the changelog for the version that is installed.
237 However, you can specify the same options as for the
238 <option>install</option> command.</para>
239 </listitem>
240 </varlistentry>
241
242 <varlistentry><term><option>files</option></term>
243 <listitem><para>Displays by default a deb822 formatted listing of
244 information about all data files <command>apt-get
245 update</command> would download. Supports a
246 <option>--format</option> option to modify the output format as
247 well as accepts lines of the default output to filter the records
248 by. The command is mainly used as an interface for external tools
249 working with APT to get information as well as filenames for
250 downloaded files so they can use them as well instead of
251 downloading them again on their own. Detailed documentation is
252 omitted here and can instead be found in the source tree in
253 <literal><filename>doc/acquire-additional-files.txt</filename></literal>.
254 </para>
255 </listitem>
256 </varlistentry>
257
258
259 </variablelist>
260 </refsect1>
261
262 <refsect1><title>options</title>
263 &apt-cmdblurb;
264
265 <variablelist>
266 <varlistentry><term><option>--no-install-recommends</option></term>
267 <listitem><para>Do not consider recommended packages as a dependency for installing.
268 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Install-Recommends</literal>.</para></listitem>
269 </varlistentry>
270
271 <varlistentry><term><option>--install-suggests</option></term>
272 <listitem><para>Consider suggested packages as a dependency for installing.
273 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Install-Suggests</literal>.</para></listitem>
274 </varlistentry>
275
276 <varlistentry><term><option>-d</option></term><term><option>--download-only</option></term>
277 <listitem><para>Download only; package files are only retrieved, not unpacked or installed.
278 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Download-Only</literal>.</para></listitem>
279 </varlistentry>
280
281 <varlistentry><term><option>-f</option></term><term><option>--fix-broken</option></term>
282 <listitem><para>Fix; attempt to correct a system with broken dependencies in
283 place. This option, when used with install/remove, can omit any packages
284 to permit APT to deduce a likely solution. If packages are specified,
285 these have to completely correct the problem. The option is sometimes necessary when
286 running APT for the first time; APT itself does not allow broken package
287 dependencies to exist on a system. It is possible that a system's
288 dependency structure can be so corrupt as to require manual intervention
289 (which usually means using <command>dpkg --remove</command> to eliminate some of
290 the offending packages). Use of this option together with <option>-m</option> may produce an
291 error in some situations.
292 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Fix-Broken</literal>.</para></listitem>
293 </varlistentry>
294
295 <varlistentry><term><option>-m</option></term><term><option>--ignore-missing</option></term>
296 <term><option>--fix-missing</option></term>
297 <listitem><para>Ignore missing packages; if packages cannot be retrieved or fail the
298 integrity check after retrieval (corrupted package files), hold back
299 those packages and handle the result. Use of this option together with
300 <option>-f</option> may produce an error in some situations. If a package is
301 selected for installation (particularly if it is mentioned on the
302 command line) and it could not be downloaded then it will be silently
303 held back.
304 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Fix-Missing</literal>.</para></listitem>
305 </varlistentry>
306
307 <varlistentry><term><option>--no-download</option></term>
308 <listitem><para>Disables downloading of packages. This is best used with
309 <option>--ignore-missing</option> to force APT to use only the .debs it has
310 already downloaded.
311 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Download</literal>.</para></listitem>
312 </varlistentry>
313
314 <varlistentry><term><option>-q</option></term><term><option>--quiet</option></term>
315 <listitem><para>Quiet; produces output suitable for logging, omitting progress indicators.
316 More q's will produce more quiet up to a maximum of 2. You can also use
317 <option>-q=#</option> to set the quiet level, overriding the configuration file.
318 Note that quiet level 2 implies <option>-y</option>; you should never use -qq
319 without a no-action modifier such as -d, --print-uris or -s as APT may
320 decide to do something you did not expect.
321 Configuration Item: <literal>quiet</literal>.</para></listitem>
322 </varlistentry>
323
324 <varlistentry><term><option>-s</option></term>
325 <term><option>--simulate</option></term>
326 <term><option>--just-print</option></term>
327 <term><option>--dry-run</option></term>
328 <term><option>--recon</option></term>
329 <term><option>--no-act</option></term>
330 <listitem><para>No action; perform a simulation of events that would occur but do not
331 actually change the system.
332 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Simulate</literal>.</para>
333
334 <para>Simulated runs performed as a user will automatically deactivate locking
335 (<literal>Debug::NoLocking</literal>), and if the option
336 <literal>APT::Get::Show-User-Simulation-Note</literal> is set
337 (as it is by default) a notice will also be displayed indicating that
338 this is only a simulation. Runs performed as root do not trigger either
339 NoLocking or the notice - superusers should know what they are doing
340 without further warnings from <literal>apt-get</literal>.</para>
341
342 <para>Simulated runs print out a series of lines, each representing a <command>dpkg</command>
343 operation: configure (<literal>Conf</literal>), remove (<literal>Remv</literal>)
344 or unpack (<literal>Inst</literal>). Square brackets indicate broken packages, and
345 empty square brackets indicate breaks that are of no consequence (rare).</para></listitem>
346 </varlistentry>
347
348 <varlistentry><term><option>-y</option></term><term><option>--yes</option></term>
349 <term><option>--assume-yes</option></term>
350 <listitem><para>Automatic yes to prompts; assume "yes" as answer to all prompts and run
351 non-interactively. If an undesirable situation, such as changing a held
352 package, trying to install a unauthenticated package or removing an essential package
353 occurs then <literal>apt-get</literal> will abort.
354 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Assume-Yes</literal>.</para></listitem>
355 </varlistentry>
356
357 <varlistentry><term><option>--assume-no</option></term>
358 <listitem><para>Automatic "no" to all prompts.
359 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Assume-No</literal>.</para></listitem>
360 </varlistentry>
361
362 <varlistentry><term><option>-u</option></term><term><option>--show-upgraded</option></term>
363 <listitem><para>Show upgraded packages; print out a list of all packages that are to be
364 upgraded.
365 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Show-Upgraded</literal>.</para></listitem>
366 </varlistentry>
367
368 <varlistentry><term><option>-V</option></term><term><option>--verbose-versions</option></term>
369 <listitem><para>Show full versions for upgraded and installed packages.
370 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Show-Versions</literal>.</para></listitem>
371 </varlistentry>
372
373 <varlistentry><term><option>-a</option></term>
374 <term><option>--host-architecture</option></term>
375 <listitem><para>This option controls the architecture packages are built for
376 by <command>apt-get source --compile</command> and how cross-builddependencies
377 are satisfied. By default is it not set which means that the host architecture
378 is the same as the build architecture (which is defined by <literal>APT::Architecture</literal>).
379 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Host-Architecture</literal>.
380 </para></listitem>
381 </varlistentry>
382
383 <varlistentry><term><option>-P</option></term>
384 <term><option>--build-profiles</option></term>
385 <listitem><para>This option controls the activated build profiles for which
386 a source package is built by <command>apt-get source --compile</command> and
387 how build dependencies are satisfied. By default no build profile is active.
388 More than one build profile can be activated at a time by concatenating them
389 with a comma.
390 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Build-Profiles</literal>.
391 </para></listitem>
392 </varlistentry>
393
394 <varlistentry><term><option>-b</option></term><term><option>--compile</option></term>
395 <term><option>--build</option></term>
396 <listitem><para>Compile source packages after downloading them.
397 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Compile</literal>.</para></listitem>
398 </varlistentry>
399
400 <varlistentry><term><option>--ignore-hold</option></term>
401 <listitem><para>Ignore package holds; this causes <command>apt-get</command> to ignore a hold
402 placed on a package. This may be useful in conjunction with
403 <literal>dist-upgrade</literal> to override a large number of undesired holds.
404 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Ignore-Hold</literal>.</para></listitem>
405 </varlistentry>
406
407 <varlistentry><term><option>--with-new-pkgs</option></term>
408 <listitem><para>Allow installing new packages when used in
409 conjunction with <literal>upgrade</literal>. This is useful if
410 the update of a installed package requires new dependencies to be
411 installed. Instead of holding the package back <literal>upgrade</literal>
412 will upgrade the package and install the new dependencies. Note that
413 <literal>upgrade</literal> with this option will never remove packages,
414 only allow adding new ones.
415 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Upgrade-Allow-New</literal>.
416 </para></listitem>
417 </varlistentry>
418
419 <varlistentry><term><option>--no-upgrade</option></term>
420 <listitem><para>Do not upgrade packages; when used in conjunction with <literal>install</literal>,
421 <literal>no-upgrade</literal> will prevent packages on the command line
422 from being upgraded if they are already installed.
423 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Upgrade</literal>.</para></listitem>
424 </varlistentry>
425
426 <varlistentry><term><option>--only-upgrade</option></term>
427 <listitem><para>Do not install new packages; when used in conjunction
428 with <literal>install</literal>, <literal>only-upgrade</literal> will
429 install upgrades for already installed packages only and ignore requests
430 to install new packages.
431 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Only-Upgrade</literal>.</para></listitem>
432 </varlistentry>
433
434 <varlistentry><term><option>--force-yes</option></term>
435 <listitem><para>Force yes; this is a dangerous option that will cause apt to continue
436 without prompting if it is doing something potentially harmful. It
437 should not be used except in very special situations. Using
438 <literal>force-yes</literal> can potentially destroy your system!
439 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::force-yes</literal>.</para></listitem>
440 </varlistentry>
441
442 <varlistentry><term><option>--print-uris</option></term>
443 <listitem><para>Instead of fetching the files to install their URIs are printed. Each
444 URI will have the path, the destination file name, the size and the expected
445 MD5 hash. Note that the file name to write to will not always match
446 the file name on the remote site! This also works with the
447 <literal>source</literal> and <literal>update</literal> commands. When used with the
448 <literal>update</literal> command the MD5 and size are not included, and it is
449 up to the user to decompress any compressed files.
450 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Print-URIs</literal>.</para></listitem>
451 </varlistentry>
452
453 <varlistentry><term><option>--purge</option></term>
454 <listitem><para>Use purge instead of remove for anything that would be removed.
455 An asterisk ("*") will be displayed next to packages which are
456 scheduled to be purged. <option>remove --purge</option> is equivalent to the
457 <option>purge</option> command.
458 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Purge</literal>.</para></listitem>
459 </varlistentry>
460
461 <varlistentry><term><option>--reinstall</option></term>
462 <listitem><para>Re-install packages that are already installed and at the newest version.
463 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::ReInstall</literal>.</para></listitem>
464 </varlistentry>
465
466 <varlistentry><term><option>--list-cleanup</option></term>
467 <listitem><para>This option is on by default; use <literal>--no-list-cleanup</literal> to turn
468 it off. When it is on, <command>apt-get</command> will automatically manage the contents
469 of <filename>&statedir;/lists</filename> to ensure that obsolete files are erased.
470 The only reason to turn it off is if you frequently change your sources list.
471 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::List-Cleanup</literal>.</para></listitem>
472 </varlistentry>
473
474 <varlistentry><term><option>-t</option></term>
475 <term><option>--target-release</option></term>
476 <term><option>--default-release</option></term>
477 <listitem><para>This option controls the default input to the policy engine; it creates
478 a default pin at priority 990 using the specified release string.
479 This overrides the general settings in <filename>/etc/apt/preferences</filename>.
480 Specifically pinned packages are not affected by the value
481 of this option. In short, this option
482 lets you have simple control over which distribution packages will be
483 retrieved from. Some common examples might be
484 <option>-t '2.1*'</option>, <option>-t unstable</option>
485 or <option>-t sid</option>.
486 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Default-Release</literal>;
487 see also the &apt-preferences; manual page.</para></listitem>
488 </varlistentry>
489
490 <varlistentry><term><option>--trivial-only</option></term>
491 <listitem><para>
492 Only perform operations that are 'trivial'. Logically this can be considered
493 related to <option>--assume-yes</option>; where <option>--assume-yes</option> will answer
494 yes to any prompt, <option>--trivial-only</option> will answer no.
495 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Trivial-Only</literal>.</para></listitem>
496 </varlistentry>
497
498 <varlistentry><term><option>--no-remove</option></term>
499 <listitem><para>If any packages are to be removed apt-get immediately aborts without
500 prompting.
501 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Remove</literal>.</para></listitem>
502 </varlistentry>
503
504 <varlistentry><term><option>--auto-remove</option></term>
505 <listitem><para>If the command is either <literal>install</literal> or <literal>remove</literal>,
506 then this option acts like running the <literal>autoremove</literal> command, removing unused
507 dependency packages. Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::AutomaticRemove</literal>.
508 </para></listitem>
509 </varlistentry>
510
511 <varlistentry><term><option>--only-source</option></term>
512 <listitem><para>Only has meaning for the
513 <literal>source</literal> and <literal>build-dep</literal>
514 commands. Indicates that the given source names are not to be
515 mapped through the binary table. This means that if this option
516 is specified, these commands will only accept source package
517 names as arguments, rather than accepting binary package names
518 and looking up the corresponding source package. Configuration
519 Item: <literal>APT::Get::Only-Source</literal>.</para></listitem>
520 </varlistentry>
521
522 <varlistentry><term><option>--diff-only</option></term><term><option>--dsc-only</option></term><term><option>--tar-only</option></term>
523 <listitem><para>Download only the diff, dsc, or tar file of a source archive.
524 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Diff-Only</literal>, <literal>APT::Get::Dsc-Only</literal>, and
525 <literal>APT::Get::Tar-Only</literal>.</para></listitem>
526 </varlistentry>
527
528 <varlistentry><term><option>--arch-only</option></term>
529 <listitem><para>Only process architecture-dependent build-dependencies.
530 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::Arch-Only</literal>.</para></listitem>
531 </varlistentry>
532
533 <varlistentry><term><option>--allow-unauthenticated</option></term>
534 <listitem><para>Ignore if packages can't be authenticated and don't prompt about it.
535 This is useful for tools like pbuilder.
536 Configuration Item: <literal>APT::Get::AllowUnauthenticated</literal>.</para></listitem>
537 </varlistentry>
538
539 <varlistentry><term><option>--no-allow-insecure-repositories</option></term>
540 <listitem><para>Forbid the update command to acquire unverifiable
541 data from configured sources. Apt will fail at the update command
542 for repositories without valid cryptographically signatures.
543
544 Configuration Item: <literal>Acquire::AllowInsecureRepositories</literal>.</para></listitem>
545 </varlistentry>
546
547 <varlistentry><term><option>--show-progress</option></term>
548 <listitem><para>Show user friendly progress information in the
549 terminal window when packages are installed, upgraded or
550 removed. For a machine parsable version of this data see
551 README.progress-reporting in the apt doc directory.
552 Configuration Item: <literal>Dpkg::Progress</literal> and <literal>Dpkg::Progress-Fancy</literal>.</para></listitem>
553 </varlistentry>
554
555
556 &apt-commonoptions;
557
558 </variablelist>
559 </refsect1>
560
561 <refsect1><title>Files</title>
562 <variablelist>
563 &file-sourceslist;
564 &file-aptconf;
565 &file-preferences;
566 &file-cachearchives;
567 &file-statelists;
568 </variablelist>
569 </refsect1>
570
571 <refsect1><title>See Also</title>
572 <para>&apt-cache;, &apt-cdrom;, &dpkg;, &sources-list;,
573 &apt-conf;, &apt-config;, &apt-secure;,
574 The APT User's guide in &guidesdir;, &apt-preferences;, the APT Howto.</para>
575 </refsect1>
576
577 <refsect1><title>Diagnostics</title>
578 <para><command>apt-get</command> returns zero on normal operation, decimal 100 on error.</para>
579 </refsect1>
580 &manbugs;
581 </refentry>