-Note that the acquire system will automatically choose to download
-a compressed file if it is available and uncompress it for you, just as
-it will also use pdiff patching if provided by the repository and
-enabled by the user. You only have to ensure that the Release file
-contains the information about the compressed files/pdiffs to make this
-happen. NO properties have to be set to enable this.
+The acquire system will automatically choose to download a compressed
+file if it is available and uncompress it for you, just as it will also
+use PDiff patching if provided by the repository and enabled by the
+user. You only have to ensure that the Release file contains the
+information about the compressed files/PDiffs to make this happen.
+*NO* properties have to be set to enable this!
+
+
+More properties exist, but these should *NOT* be set by front-ends
+requesting files. They exist for internal and end-user usage only.
+Some of these are – which are documented here only to ensure that they
+aren't accidentally used by front-ends:
+* PDiffs: controls if apt will try to use PDiffs for this target.
+ Defaults to the value of Acquire::PDiffs which is true by default.
+ Can be overridden per-source by the sources.list option of the same
+ name. See the documentation for both of these for details.
+* By-Hash: controls if apt will try to use an URI constructed from
+ a hashsum of the file to download. See the documentation for config
+ option Acquire::By-Hash and sources.list option By-Hash for details.
+* CompressionTypes: The default value is a space separated list of
+ compression types supported by apt (see Acquire::CompressionTypes).
+ You can set this option to prevent apt from downloading a compression
+ type a front-end can't open transparently. This should always be
+ a temporary workaround through and a bug should be reported against
+ the front-end in question.
+* KeepCompressedAs: The default value is a space separated list of
+ compression types supported by apt (see previous option) which is
+ sorted by the cost-value of the compression in ascending order,
+ except that cost=0 "compressions" (like uncompressed) are listed last.
+