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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-13 09:59:37 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-13 09:59:37 +0000
commit76e2632459410dec81337edb6a9fee33c9a660f3 (patch)
treea73345df208eede4a4daad340515c9328f34625c /doc/apt-transport-mirror.1.xml
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadapt-76e2632459410dec81337edb6a9fee33c9a660f3.tar.xz
apt-76e2632459410dec81337edb6a9fee33c9a660f3.zip
Adding upstream version 2.7.12.upstream/2.7.12
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="no"?>
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
+<!ENTITY % aptent SYSTEM "apt.ent"> %aptent;
+<!ENTITY % aptverbatiment SYSTEM "apt-verbatim.ent"> %aptverbatiment;
+<!ENTITY % aptvendor SYSTEM "apt-vendor.ent"> %aptvendor;
+]>
+
+<refentry>
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ &apt-author.team;
+ &apt-email;
+ &apt-product;
+ <!-- The last update date -->
+ <date>2017-12-09T00:00:00Z</date>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>apt-transport-mirror</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>1</manvolnum>
+ <refmiscinfo class="manual">APT</refmiscinfo>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <!-- Man page title -->
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>apt-transport-mirror</refname>
+ <refpurpose>APT transport for more automated mirror selection</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+<refsect1><title>Description</title>
+<para>This APT transport isn't implementing a protocol to access local or remote repositories
+on its own, but acquires a mirrorlist and redirects all requests to the mirror(s) picked from
+this list, accessing them via other transports like &apt-transport-http;. The basic functionality has
+been available since apt 0.7.24, but was undocumented until apt 1.6 which contained a complete
+rework of the transport and its supported features. Note that a transport is never called directly
+by a user but used by APT tools based on user configuration.</para>
+<para>If the acquisition of a file via a mirror fails, the method ensures that another possible mirror
+from the list is automatically tried until either the file is retrieved or no mirror is
+left in the list, transparently handling server downtimes and similar problems.</para>
+<para>The security implications of the transport depend on the security considerations
+associated with the transport used to acquire the mirrorlist and the transports involved in
+accessing the chosen mirror(s) by the transport.</para>
+</refsect1>
+
+<refsect1><title>Options</title>
+<para>This transport has no configuration options at present. The mirror selection is
+based entirely on the mirrors offered in the mirrorlist and the files APT needs to
+acquire.</para>
+
+<refsect2><title>Mirrorlist format</title>
+<para>A mirrorlist contains one or more lines each specifying a URI for a mirror.
+Empty lines and those starting with a hash character (<literal>#</literal>) are ignored.
+A URI always starts with a URI scheme which defines the transport used for this
+mirror. If for example the URI starts with <literal>http:</literal>, the responsible transport
+is &apt-transport-http; which might have specific requirements for the format of
+the remaining part of the URI.</para>
+<para>Metadata about a mirror can be given on the same line, separated from the URI by a tab.
+Multiple items of metadata can themselves be separated by either tabs or spaces.
+(This is an advanced feature only available with apt >= 1.6. Earlier apt versions will
+fail to parse mirrorlists using this feature.)</para>
+<para>Since apt 1.6 the use of compressed mirrorlists is also supported.
+Note that the filename of the mirrorlist must specify the compression algorithm used;
+there is no auto-detection based on file contents.</para>
+</refsect2>
+
+<refsect2><title>Mirror selection by metadata</title>
+<para>As specified in the format, a mirror can have additional metadata attached to
+prevent a mirror from being selected for acquiring a file not matching this metadata.
+This way the mirrorlist can e.g. contain partial mirrors serving only certain
+architectures and APT will automatically choose a different mirror for files requiring
+an unlisted architecture. Supported are limits for the architecture (<literal>arch</literal>),
+codename of the release (<literal>codename</literal>), component of the repository
+the file is in (<literal>component</literal>), language the file applies to (<literal>lang</literal>),
+suite name of the release (<literal>suite</literal>) and type of the file (<literal>type</literal>).</para>
+</refsect2>
+
+<refsect2><title>Fallback order for mirrors</title>
+<para>If no priority is given for a mirror via the metadata key <literal>priority</literal>,
+the order in which mirrors are contacted is random. If a certain set of mirrors
+should be tried first before any of another set is tried, a priority can be explicitly
+set. The mirrors with the lowest number are tried first. Mirrors which have no explicit
+priority set default to the highest possible number and are therefore tried last. The
+choice between mirrors with the same priority is again random.</para>
+</refsect2>
+
+<refsect2><title>Allowed transports in a mirrorlist</title>
+<para>The availability and choice of transports in a mirrorlist is limited by how the APT
+client is accessing the mirrorlist. If a local transport like <literal>file</literal>
+or <literal>copy</literal> is used, the mirrorlist can also include local sources, while a
+mirrorlist accessed via <literal>http</literal> can not. Additionally, a mirrorlist can
+not contain a mirrorlist or other wrapping transports (like <package>apt-transport-tor</package>).
+See the documentation of these transports on how to use them with the mirror method.</para>
+<para>Note that apt versions before 1.6 do not support any other transport than <literal>http</literal>.</para>
+</refsect2>
+</refsect1>
+
+<refsect1><title>Examples</title>
+<refsect2><title>Basic example</title>
+<para>A basic mirrorlist example supported by all apt versions with a mirror method
+(>= 0.7.24) in which the client will pick any of the three mirrors:</para>
+<literallayout>
+http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/
+http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/
+http://deb.debian.org/debian/
+</literallayout>
+<para>Assuming a file with this content is stored as <filename>/etc/apt/mirrorlist.txt</filename>
+on your machine it can be used like this in &sources-list; (since apt 1.6):</para>
+<literallayout>
+deb mirror+file:/etc/apt/mirrorlist.txt &debian-stable-codename; main
+</literallayout>
+<para>All versions of the mirror method support a mirrorlist accessible via HTTP, so assuming
+it is available at <literal>http://apt.example.org/mirror.lst</literal> the sources.list entry
+from above could instead be written as:</para>
+<literallayout>
+deb mirror://apt.example.org/mirror.lst &debian-stable-codename; main
+</literallayout>
+<para>Note that since apt 1.6 the use of <literal>mirror+http</literal> should
+be preferred over <literal>mirror</literal> for uniformity. The functionality is the same.</para>
+</refsect2>
+<refsect2><title>Example with metadata-enhanced mirror selection</title>
+<para>As explained in the format definition apt versions before 1.6 do not support this and
+will fail parsing the mirrorlist. The example mirrorlist is intentionally complicated to show some
+aspects of the selection. The following setup is assumed: The first mirror is a local mirror
+accessible via the file method, but potentially incomplete. The second mirror has a great
+connection, but is a partial mirror insofar as it only contains files related
+to the architectures <literal>amd64</literal> and <literal>all</literal>. The remaining mirrors
+are average mirrors which should be contacted only if the earlier ones didn't work.
+</para>
+<literallayout>
+file:/srv/local/debian/mirror/ priority:1 type:index
+http://partial.example.org/mirror/ priority:2 arch:amd64 arch:all type:deb
+http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ type:deb
+http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/ type:deb
+https://deb.debian.org/debian/
+</literallayout>
+<para>In this setup with this mirrorlist the first mirror will be used to download all
+index files assuming the mirrorlist itself is accessed via a local transport like
+<literal>file</literal>. If it isn't, if the mirror is otherwise inaccessible or if it does not
+contain the requested file another mirror will be used to acquire the file, chosen
+depending on the type of the file: An index file will be served by the last
+mirror in the list, while a package of architecture <literal>amd64</literal> is served by
+the second and those of e.g. architecture <literal>i386</literal> by one of the last three.</para>
+
+</refsect2>
+</refsect1>
+
+ &manbugs;
+
+</refentry>