X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/apt.git/blobdiff_plain/70d761713bf1b1b4520079161708f66e8e3a4e31..178dd062eeaa1d7e56770455e005dc27aa71f026:/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml diff --git a/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml b/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml index 219da7cd1..f08f92b94 100644 --- a/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml +++ b/doc/apt_preferences.5.xml @@ -69,8 +69,8 @@ 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 (-), +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 @@ -259,6 +259,49 @@ 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