&apt-email;
&apt-product;
<!-- The last update date -->
- <date>2014-01-18T00:00:00Z</date>
+ <date>2015-11-26T00:00:00Z</date>
</refentryinfo>
<refmeta>
archive, <filename>distribution/component</filename>. The
<literal>distribution</literal> is generally a suite name like
<literal>stable</literal> or <literal>testing</literal> or a codename like
- <literal>&stable-codename;</literal> or <literal>&testing-codename;</literal>
+ <literal>&debian-stable-codename;</literal> or <literal>&debian-testing-codename;</literal>
while component is one of <literal>main</literal>, <literal>contrib</literal> or
<literal>non-free</literal>. The
<literal>deb-src</literal> type references a Debian distribution's source
is a tri-state value which defaults to APT deciding if a source
is considered trusted or if warnings should be raised before e.g.
packages are installed from this source. This option can be used
- to override this decision either with the value <literal>yes</literal>,
- which lets APT consider this source always as a trusted source,
- even if it lacks or fails authentication checks, by disabling parts
- of &apt-secure;. It should therefore only be used in a local and trusted
- context (if at all) as otherwise security is breached. The opposite
- can be achieved with the value <literal>no</literal>, which
- causes the source to be handled as untrusted even if the
- authentication checks passed successfully.
- The default value can't be set explicitly.
+ to override that decision. The value <literal>yes</literal> tells APT
+ always to consider this source as trusted, even if it doesn't pass
+ authentication checks. It disables parts of &apt-secure;, and should
+ therefore only be used in a local and trusted context (if at all) as
+ otherwise security is breached. The value <literal>no</literal> does
+ the opposite, causing the source to be handled as untrusted even if
+ the authentication checks passed successfully. The default value can't
+ be set explicitly.
</para></listitem>
<listitem><para><option>Signed-By</option> (<option>signed-by</option>)
<para>The first line gets package information for the architectures in <literal>APT::Architectures</literal>
while the second always retrieves <literal>amd64</literal> and <literal>armel</literal>.</para>
- <literallayout>deb http://httpredir.debian.org/debian &stable-codename; main
-deb [ arch=amd64,armel ] http://httpredir.debian.org/debian &stable-codename; main</literallayout>
+ <literallayout>deb http://httpredir.debian.org/debian &debian-stable-codename; main
+deb [ arch=amd64,armel ] http://httpredir.debian.org/debian &debian-stable-codename; main</literallayout>
<literallayout>Types: deb
URIs: http://httpredir.debian.org/debian
-Suites: &stable-codename;
+Suites: &debian-stable-codename;
Components: main
Types: deb
URIs: http://httpredir.debian.org/debian
-Suites: &stable-codename;
+Suites: &debian-stable-codename;
Components: main
Architectures: amd64 armel
</literallayout>
Components: main</literallayout>
<para>Uses FTP to access the archive at ftp.debian.org, under the debian
- directory, and uses only the &stable-codename;/contrib area.</para>
- <literallayout>deb ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian &stable-codename; contrib</literallayout>
+ directory, and uses only the &debian-stable-codename;/contrib area.</para>
+ <literallayout>deb ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian &debian-stable-codename; contrib</literallayout>
<literallayout>Types: deb
URIs: ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian
-Suites: &stable-codename;
+Suites: &debian-stable-codename;
Components: contrib</literallayout>
<para>Uses FTP to access the archive at ftp.debian.org, under the debian