X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/apt.git/blobdiff_plain/2d555a8205eccc4cb17b93f7c92b71a854e8f82e..6072cbe130d5ada4d733bb82dcd30c1529084985:/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml diff --git a/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml b/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml index 54c01100c..1f953029e 100644 --- a/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml +++ b/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ - %aptent; @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ &apt-email; &apt-product; - 16 February 2010 + 2010-02-16T00:00:00Z @@ -69,10 +69,12 @@ You have been warned. Note that the files in the /etc/apt/preferences.d directory are parsed in alphanumeric ascending order and need to obey the -following naming convention: The files have no or "pref" -as filename extension and which only contain alphanumeric, hyphen (-), -underscore (_) and period (.) characters - otherwise they will be silently -ignored. +following naming convention: The files have either no or "pref" +as filename extension and only contain alphanumeric, hyphen (-), +underscore (_) and period (.) characters. +Otherwise APT will print a notice that it has ignored a file if the file +doesn't match a pattern in the Dir::Ignore-Files-Silently +configuration list - in this case it will be silently ignored. APT's Default Priority Assignments @@ -103,12 +105,16 @@ algorithm to set the priorities of the versions of a package. Assign: priority 1 to the versions coming from archives which in their Release -files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" like the debian experimental archive. +files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" but not as "ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes" +like the debian experimental archive. priority 100 -to the version that is already installed (if any). +to the version that is already installed (if any) and to the versions coming +from archives which in their Release files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" and +"ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes" like the debian backports archive since squeeze-backports. + @@ -125,9 +131,10 @@ files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" like the debian experimental archive.If the target release has not been specified then APT simply assigns priority 100 to all installed package versions and priority 500 to all -uninstalled package versions, expect versions coming from archives which +uninstalled package versions, except versions coming from archives which in their Release files are marked as "NotAutomatic: yes" - -these versions get the priority 1. +these versions get the priority 1 or priority 100 if it is additionally marked +as "ButAutomaticUpgrades: yes". APT then applies the following rules, listed in order of precedence, to determine which version of a package to install. @@ -252,6 +259,50 @@ Pin-Priority: 500 +Regular expressions and glob() syntax + +APT also supports pinning by glob() expressions and regular +expressions surrounded by /. For example, the following +example assigns the priority 500 to all packages from +experimental where the name starts with gnome (as a glob()-like +expression) or contains the word kde (as a POSIX extended regular +expression surrounded by slashes). + + + +Package: gnome* /kde/ +Pin: release n=experimental +Pin-Priority: 500 + + + +The rule for those expressions is that they can occur anywhere +where a string can occur. Thus, the following pin assigns the +priority 990 to all packages from a release starting with karmic. + + + +Package: * +Pin: release n=karmic* +Pin-Priority: 990 + + + +If a regular expression occurs in a Package field, +the behavior is the same as if this regular expression were replaced +with a list of all package names it matches. It is undecided whether +this will change in the future, thus you should always list wild-card +pins first, so later specific pins override it. + +The pattern "*" in a Package field is not considered +a glob() expression in itself. + + + + + + + How APT Interprets Priorities @@ -409,7 +460,7 @@ Pin: release n=&testing-codename; the Version: line names the release version. For example, the -packages in the tree might belong to Debian GNU/Linux release +packages in the tree might belong to Debian release version 3.0. Note that there is normally no version number for the testing and unstable distributions because they have not been released yet. Specifying this in the APT preferences