apt-proxy-import

Autres langues

Langue: en

Version: June 2008 (debian - 07/07/09)

Section: 8 (Commandes administrateur)

NAME

apt-proxy-import - Import packages into the apt-proxy cache.

SYNOPSIS

apt-proxy-import [options] <filename> ...

DESCRIPTION

apt-proxy-import -r [options] <directory> ...

OPTIONS

-V, --version
print version and quit
-v, --verbose
give verbose output
-d, --debug
debug output
-q, --quiet
try not to write messages to stdout
-r, --recursive
recurse into subdirectories
-h, --help
Display this help and exit.
-c, --config-file=
Configuration file

apt-proxy-import imports .deb files into the apt-proxy cache.

It uses the package lists to determine where each file should be placed, so you should run 'apt-get update' to allow apt-proxy to update the package lists before running apt-proxy-import.

USING TO BOOTSTRAP A NEW APT-PROXY CACHE

If you have been using apt standalone, you probably have built up a large collection of .debs or .udebs in apt's cache directory. You can import these files into apt-proxy as follows:

1. Update apt-proxy's filelists:

     apt-get update
 

2. Import files from apt's cache:

     apt-proxy-import /var/cache/apt/archives
 

IMPORTING APT-MOVE CACHE

You can import the apt-move generated cache into apt-proxy using the following command:
     apt-proxy-import -r /var/cache/apt-move
 

This tells apt-proxy-import to recuse over each directory in the apt-move cache.

FILES

 /etc/apt-proxy/apt-proxy.conf

BUGS

apt-proxy-import does not use max_age or max_versions to clean the cache directory on import.

It does not yet import source.tar.gz or Packages files.

You must run it as the apt-proxy user or as root.

AUTHORS

Chris Halls <halls@debian.org>, Manuel Estrada Sainz <ranty@debian.org>

SEE ALSO

apt-proxy(8), apt-proxy.conf(5)