In its basic form, aptitude's configuration file is a
list of options and their values. Each line of the file
should have the form
“Option
Value;”:
for instance, the following line in the configuration file
sets the option Aptitude::Theme to
“Dselect”.
Aptitude::Theme "Dselect";
An option can “contain” other options if they are written in curly braces between the option and the semicolon following it, like this:
Aptitude::UI {
Package-Status-Format "";
Package-Display-Format "";
};
An option that contains other options is sometimes called
a group. In fact, the double
colons that appear in option names are actually a
shorthand way of indicating containment: the option
Aptitude::UI::Default-Grouping is
contained in the group Aptitude::UI,
which itself is contained in the group
Aptitude. Thus, if you wanted to, you
could set this option to "" as follows:
Aptitude {
UI {
Default-Grouping "";
};
};For more information on the format of the configuration file, see the manual page apt.conf(5).
aptitude's configuration is read from the following sources, in order:
Configuration file options specified on the command-line.
The user's configuration file,
~/.aptitude/config. This file is
overwritten when the user modifies settings in the
Options menu.
The system configuration file,
/etc/apt/apt.conf.
The system configuration fragment files,
/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/*.
The file specified by the APT_CONFIG
environment variable (if any).
Default values stored in
/usr/share/aptitude/aptitude-defaults.
Default values built into aptitude.
When an option is being checked, these sources are
searched in order, and the first one that provides a value
for the option is used. For instance, setting an option
in /etc/apt/apt.conf will override
aptitude's defaults for that option, but will not
override user settings in
~/.aptitude/config.
The following configuration options are used by
aptitude. Note that these are not the only available
configuration options; options used by the underlying
apt system are not listed here. See the manual pages
apt(8)
and
apt.conf(5)
for information on apt options.
APT::AutoRemove::RecommendsImportanttruetrue, then
aptitude will not consider packages to be unused
(and thus will not automatically remove them) as long
as any installed package recommends them, even if
APT::Install-Recommends
is false. For more information,
see the section called “Managing automatically installed packages”.
APT::AutoRemove::SuggestsImportanttruetrue, then
aptitude will not consider packages to be unused
(and thus will not automatically remove them) as long
as any installed package suggests them. For more
information, see the section called “Managing automatically installed packages”.
APT::Get::List-CleanuptrueAPT::List-Cleanup.
If either of these options is set to
false, aptitude will not delete
old package list files after downloading a new set of
package lists.
APT::List-CleanuptrueAPT::Get::List-Cleanup.
If either of these options is set to
false, aptitude will not delete
old package list files after downloading a new set of
package lists.
APT::Install-Recommendstruetrue and
Aptitude::Auto-Install is
true, then whenever you mark a
package for installation, aptitude will also mark
the packages it recommends for installation.
Furthermore, if this option is
true, aptitude will not consider
packages to be unused (and thus will not automatically
remove them) as long as any installed package
reommends them. For more information, see the section called “Managing automatically installed packages” and the section called “Immediate dependency resolution”.
Aptitude::Allow-Null-Upgradefalsetrue, aptitude will
continue to the preview screen whenever there are
upgradable packages, rather than displaying a reminder
about the → (U) command.
Aptitude::Always-Use-Safe-Resolverfalsetrue, aptitude's
command-line actions will always use a
“safe” dependency resolver, as if --safe-resolver
had been passed on the command line.
Aptitude::Autoclean-After-Updatefalsetrue, aptitude will clean
up obsolete files (see → ) every time
you update the package list.
This option is similar to Aptitude::Clean-After-Install.
Aptitude::Auto-Fix-Brokentruefalse,
aptitude will ask for permission before
attempting to fix any broken packages.
Aptitude::Auto-Installtruetrue, aptitude
will automatically attempt to fulfill the dependencies
of a package when you mark a package to be installed
or upgraded.
Aptitude::Auto-Install-Remove-Okfalsetrue, aptitude
will automatically remove conflicting packages when
you mark a package to be installed or upgraded.
Normally these conflicts are flagged and you must
handle them manually.
Aptitude::Auto-Upgradefalsetrue,
aptitude will automatically flag all
upgradable packages for upgrade when the program
starts, as if you had issued the command
→ (U).
Aptitude::Clean-After-Installfalsetrue, aptitude will clean
up all files in the package cache directory (see → ) after successful
installation of packages (or similar operations).
This option is similar to Aptitude::Autoclean-After-Update.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Always-Promptfalse-P command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Assume-Yesfalsetrue, aptitude will act as
if the user had answered “yes” to
every prompt, causing most prompts to be
skipped. This is equivalent to the
-y command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Disable-Columnsfalseaptitude
search) will not be formatted into
fixed-width columns or truncated to the screen width.
This is equivalent to the --disable-columns
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Download-Onlyfalsetrue, aptitude will
download package files but not install them.
This is equivalent to the -d
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Fix-Brokenfalsetrue, aptitude will be more
aggressive when attempting to fix the
dependencies of broken packages. This is
equivalent to the -f
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Versions-Group-Byauto,
none, package,
or source-package to control
whether and how the output of aptitude
versions is grouped. Equivalent to
the command-line option --group-by
(see its documentation for more description of what
the values mean).
Aptitude::CmdLine::Ignore-Trust-ViolationsfalseAPT::Get::AllowUnauthenticated.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Package-Display-Format%c%a%M %p# - %d#-F
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Package-Display-Width""), search results will be
formatted for the current terminal size, or for
an 80-column display if the terminal size cannot
be determined.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Progress::Percent-On-RightfalseAptitude::CmdLine::Progress::Retain-Completedfalsefalse, then
command-line progress indicators will be deleted and
overwritten once the task they represent is completed.
If it is true, then they will be
left on the terminal. This option does not affect
download progress indicators.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Request-Strictness10000Aptitude::CmdLine::Resolver-Debugfalsetrue, aptitude will print
extremely verbose information while attempting to
resolve broken dependencies. As the name suggests,
this option is primarily meant to aid in debugging the
problem resolver.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Resolver-DumpAptitude::CmdLine::Resolver-Show-Stepsfalsetrue, then a
dependency solution will be displayed as a sequence of
resolutions of individual dependencies; for instance,
“wesnoth depends upon wesnoth-data (=
1.2.4-1) -> installing wesnoth-data 1.2.4-1
(unstable)”. To toggle between the
two display modes, press o at the
prompt “Accept this solution?”.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Show-Depsfalsetrue, aptitude will display
a brief summary of the dependencies (if any)
relating to a package's state. This is
equivalent to the -D
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Show-Size-Changesfalsetrue, aptitude will display
the expected change in the amount of space used
by each package. This is equivalent to the
-Z command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Show-Summaryno-summary--show-summary.
See the documentation of --show-summary
for a list of the allowed values of this option and
their meanings.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Show-Versionsfalsetrue, aptitude will display
the version of a package that is being installed
or removed. This is equivalent to the
-V command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Show-Whyfalsetrue, aptitude will display the
manually installed packages that require each
automatically installed package, or the manually
installed packages that cause a conflict with each
automatically removed package. This is equivalent to
the -W command-line option and
displays the same information you can access via
aptitude why or by pressing
i in a package list.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Version-Display-Format%c%a%M %p# %t %iaptitude versions.
This is equivalent to the -F
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Versions-Show-Package-Namesalways,
auto, or never
to control when package names are displayed in the
output of aptitude
versions. Equivalent to the
command-line option --show-package-names
(see its documentation for more description of what
the values mean).
Aptitude::Safe-Resolver::Show-Resolver-Actionsfalse--safe-resolver
or because the command-line action is safe-upgrade,
it will display a summary of the actions taken by the
resolver before showing the installation preview.
Equivalent to the command-line option --show-resolver-actions.
Aptitude::Screenshot::IncrementalLoadLimit16384Aptitude::Screenshot::Cache-Max4194304Aptitude::CmdLine::SimulatefalseAptitude::Simulate
instead. In command-line mode, causes
aptitude to just display the actions that would be
performed (rather than actually performing them); in
the visual interface, causes aptitude to start in
read-only mode regardless of whether you are root or
not. This is equivalent to the -s
command-line option.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Verbose0-v command-line option adds 1
to this value.
Aptitude::CmdLine::Visual-Previewfalsetrue, aptitude
will enter its visual interface to display the preview
of an installation run and to download packages.
Aptitude::Delete-Unusedtruetrue,
automatically installed packages which are no
longer required will be automatically removed.
For more information, see the section called “Managing automatically installed packages”.
Aptitude::Delete-Unused-PatternAptitude::Keep-Unused-Pattern.
If Aptitude::Keep-Unused-Pattern is
unset or set to an empty string, the value of this
configuration option will override it. Otherwise,
Aptitude::Delete-Unused-Pattern is
ignored.
Aptitude::Display-Planned-Actiontruetrue,
aptitude will display a preview screen before
actually carrying out the actions you have
requested.
Aptitude::Forget-New-On-Installfalsetrue,
aptitude will clear the list of new packages
whenever you install, upgrade, or remove
packages, as if you had issued the command
→ (f).
Aptitude::Forget-New-On-Updatefalsetrue,
aptitude will clear the list of new packages
whenever the package list is updated, as if you
had issued the command → (f).
Aptitude::Get-Root-Commandsu:/bin/suroot user (see the section called “Becoming root”). It has the form
protocol:command.
protocol must be either
su or sudo; it
determines how aptitude invokes the program when it
wants to gain root privileges. If
protocol is
su, then
“command -c
arguments” is used
to become root; otherwise, aptitude uses
“command
arguments”. The
first word in command is
the name of the program that should be invoked;
remaining words are treated as arguments to that
program.
Aptitude::Ignore-Old-Tmpfalse~/.aptitude/.tmp which is no
longer necessary. If the directory exists and
Aptitude::Ignore-Old-Tmp is
true, aptitude will ask you
whether to remove this directory. This option is
automatically set to true after you
reply. On the other hand, if the directory does not
exist, this option is set to false
so that you will be notified if it reappears.
Aptitude::Ignore-Recommends-ImportantfalseAptitude::Recommends-Important
caused recommendations to be installed automatically,
the same way that APT::Install-Recommends
does today. If this option is set to
false and
Aptitude::Recommends-Important is
also set to false, aptitude will
set APT::Install-Recommends
to false and set
Aptitude::Ignore-Recommends-Important
to true on startup.
Aptitude::Keep-RecommendsfalseAPT::AutoRemove::RecommendsImportant
instead. Setting this option to
true has the same effect as setting
APT::AutoRemove::RecommendsImportant
to true.
Aptitude::Keep-SuggestsfalseAPT::AutoRemove::SuggestsImportant
instead. Setting this option to
true has the same effect as setting
APT::AutoRemove::SuggestsImportant
to true.
Aptitude::Keep-Unused-PatternAptitude::Delete-Unused
is true, only unused packages which
do not match this pattern (see
the section called “Search patterns”) will be removed.
If this option is set to an empty string (the
default), all unused packages will be removed.
Aptitude::LockFile/var/lock/aptitudeAptitude::Localize-LogfalseAptitude::Log/var/log/aptitudeAptitude::Log begins with a pipe
character (ie, “|”),
the remainder of its value is used as the name of a
command into which the log will be piped: for
instance, |mail -s 'Aptitude install run'
root will cause the log to be emailed to
root. To log to multiple files or commands, you may
set this option to a list of log targets.
Aptitude::Logging::File-” causes logging
messages to be printed to standard output. This
differs from the setting Aptitude::Log:
that file is used to log installations and removals,
whereas this file is used to log program events,
errors, and debugging messages (if enabled). This
option is equivalent to the command-line argument
--log-file.
See also Aptitude::Logging::Levels.
Aptitude::Logging::Levelslevel”, to
set the global log level (the log level of the root
logger) to the given level,
or
“category:level”,
where category is the
category of messages to modify (such as
aptitude.resolver.hints.match) and
level is the lowest log
level of messages in that category that should be
displayed. Valid log levels are
“fatal”,
“error”,
“warn”,
“info”,
“debug”, and
“trace”. The
command-line option --log-level
can be used to set or override any log level.
Aptitude::Parse-Description-Bulletstruetrue than when it is
false.
Aptitude::Pkg-Display-LimitAptitude::ProblemResolver::Allow-Break-Holdsfalsetrue, the
problem resolver will consider breaking package holds
or installing forbidden versions in order to resolve a
dependency. If it is set to false,
these actions will be rejected by default, although
you can always enable them manually (see the section called “Resolving Dependencies Interactively”).
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::BreakHoldScore-300Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Allow-Break-Holds
is set to true, the resolver will never break a hold
or install a forbidden version unless it has explicit
permission from the user.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Break-Hold-Level50000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::BrokenScore-100Aptitude::ProblemResolver::CancelRemovalScore-300Aptitude::ProblemResolver::DefaultResolutionScore400apt-get install” or
the “immediate dependency
resolver” would pick. The score is only
applied for dependencies and recommendations whose
targets are not currently installed.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Discard-Null-Solutiontruetrue, aptitude
will never suggest cancelling all of your proposed
actions in order to resolve a dependency problem.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::EssentialRemoveScore-100000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Remove-Essential-Level60000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::ExtraScore0Aptitude::ProblemResolver::FullReplacementScore500Aptitude::ProblemResolver::FutureHorizon50Aptitude::ProblemResolver::HintsAptitude::ProblemResolver::ImportantScore4Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Infinity1000000-Infinity, it will be
discarded immediately.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::InstallScore-20Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Keep-All-Level10000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::KeepScore0Aptitude::ProblemResolver::NonDefaultScore-40Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Non-Default-Level50000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::OptionalScore1Aptitude::ProblemResolver::PreserveAutoScore0Aptitude::ProblemResolver::PreserveManualScore20Aptitude::ProblemResolver::RemoveObsoleteScore310Aptitude::ProblemResolver::RemoveScore-300Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Remove-Level10000Aptitude::ProblemResolver::RequiredScore8Aptitude::ProblemResolver::ResolutionScore50Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Safe-Level10000aptitude
safe-upgrade. See the section called “Safety costs” for
a description of safety costs.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::SolutionCostsafety,priorityAptitude::ProblemResolver::StandardScore2Aptitude::ProblemResolver::StepLimit5000StepLimit to 0 will disable the
problem resolver entirely. The default value is large
enough to accomodate commonly encountered situations,
while preventing aptitude from “blowing
up” if an overly complicated problem is
encountered. (note: this applies only to command-line
searches; in the visual interface, the resolver will
continue working until it reaches a solution)
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::StepScore-10Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Trace-DirectoryAptitude::ProblemResolver::Trace-File
is also set, the same information will also be written
to the trace file. Trace directories are more
transparent than trace files, and are more suitable
for, e.g., including in source trees as test cases.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::Trace-FileAptitude::ProblemResolver::Trace-Directory
is also set, the same information will also be written
to the trace directory. A trace file is simply a
compressed archive of a trace directory; it will take
less space than the trace directory and is suitable
for transmission over a network.
Aptitude::ProblemResolver::UndoFullReplacementScore-500Aptitude::ProblemResolver::UnfixedSoftScore-200Aptitude::ProblemResolver::UpgradeScore30Aptitude::Purge-Unusedfalsetrue and
Aptitude::Delete-Unused
is also true, then packages which
are unused will be purged from
the system, removing their configuration files and
perhaps other important data. For more information
about which packages are considered to be
“unused”, see the section called “Managing automatically installed packages”. THIS OPTION CAN
CAUSE DATA LOSS! DO NOT ENABLE IT UNLESS YOU KNOW
WHAT YOU ARE DOING!
Aptitude::Recommends-ImportanttrueAPT::Install-Recommends.
On startup, aptitude will copy
Aptitude::Recommends-Important (if
it exists) to
APT::Install-Recommends and then
clear
Aptitude::Recommends-Important in
your user configuration file.
Aptitude::Safe-Resolver::No-New-Installsfalsetrue, then when
the “safe” dependency resolver has been
activated via --safe-resolver
or by using the safe-upgrade
command-line action, the resolver will not be allowed
to install packages that are not currently installed.
Aptitude::Safe-Resolver::No-New-Upgradesfalse--safe-resolver
or by using the safe-upgrade
command-line action, the resolver will not be allowed
to resolve dependencies by upgrading packages.
Aptitude::Sections::Descriptions$prefix/share/aptitude/section-descriptionssection” package
hierarchy grouping policy. Descriptions are assigned
to section trees based on the last component of the
name: for instance, a member of this group named
“games” will be used
to describe the Sections
“games”,
“non-free/games”, and
“non-free/desktop/games”.
Within the text of section descriptions, the string
“\n” will be replaced
by a line-break, and the string
“''” will be replaced
by a double-quote character.
Aptitude::Sections::Top-Sections"main"; "contrib"; "non-free"; "non-US";topdir”,
“subdir”, and
“subdirs” grouping
policies use this list to interpret Section fields: if
the first path element of a package's Section is
not contained in this list, or if
its Section has only one element, then the package
will be grouped using the first member of this list as
its first path element. For example, if the first
member of Top-Sections is
“main”, then a package
whose Section is
“games/arcade” will be
treated as if its Section field were
“main/games/arcade”.
Aptitude::Simulatefalseroot or not.
This is equivalent to the -s
command-line option.
Aptitude::Spin-Interval500Aptitude::Suggests-ImportantfalseAPT::AutoRemove::SuggestsImportant
instead. Setting this option to
true has the same effect as setting
APT::AutoRemove::SuggestsImportant
to true.
Aptitude::Suppress-Read-Only-Warningfalsefalse, aptitude
will display a warning the first time that you attempt
to modify package states while aptitude is in
read-only mode.
Aptitude::ThemeAptitude::Track-Dselect-Statetruetrue, aptitude will attempt
to detect when a change to a package's state has
been made using dselect or
dpkg: for instance, if you
remove a package using dpkg,
aptitude will not try to reinstall it. Note
that this may be somewhat buggy.
Aptitude::UI::Advance-On-Actionfalsetrue, changing a package's
state (for instance, marking it for
installation) will cause aptitude to advance
the highlight to the next package in the current
group.
Aptitude::UI::Auto-Show-Reasonstruetrue, selecting a package
which is broken or which appears to be causing
other packages to be broken will cause the
information area to automatically display some
reasons why the breakage might be occuring.
Aptitude::UI::Default-Groupingfilter(missing),status,section(subdirs,passthrough),section(topdir)Aptitude::UI::Default-Package-ViewAptitude::UI::Default-Preview-GroupingactionAptitude::UI::Default-SortingnameAptitude::UI::Description-Visible-By-Defaulttruetrue and hidden if it is
false.
Aptitude::UI::Exit-On-Last-Closetruetrue,
closing all the active views will quit
aptitude; otherwise, aptitude will not exit
until you issue the command → (Q). See
the section called “Working with multiple views” for more information.
Aptitude::UI::Fill-Textfalsetrue,
aptitude will format descriptions so that each
line is exactly the width of the screen.
Aptitude::UI::Flat-View-As-First-Viewfalsetrue,
aptitude will display a flat view on startup
instead of the default view.
Aptitude::UI::HelpBartruetrue, a
line of information about important keystrokes
will be displayed at the top of the screen.
Aptitude::UI::Incremental-Searchtruetrue,
aptitude will perform
“incremental” searches: as you type
the search pattern, it will search for the next
package matching what you have typed so far.
Aptitude::UI::InfoAreaTabsfalsetrue, aptitude
will display tabs at the top of the information area
(the pane at the bottom of the screen) describing the
different modes the area can be set to.
Aptitude::UI::KeybindingsAptitude::UI::Menubar-Autohidefalsetrue, the menu bar will be
hidden while it is not in use.
Aptitude::UI::Minibuf-Download-Barfalsetrue, aptitude will use a
less obtrusive mechanism to display the progress
of downloads: a bar at the bottom of the screen
will appear which displays the current download
status. While the download is active, pressing
q will abort it.
Aptitude::UI::Minibuf-Promptsfalsetrue, some
prompts (such as yes/no and multiple-choice
prompts) will be displayed at the bottom of the
screen instead of in dialog boxes.
Aptitude::UI::New-Package-Commandstruefalse, commands such as
→ (+) will have the same deprecated
behavior that they did in antique versions of
aptitude.
Aptitude::UI::Package-Display-Format%c%a%M %p %Z %v %VAptitude::UI::Package-Header-Format%N %n @ %H #%B %u %oAptitude::UI::Package-Status-Format%dAptitude::UI::Pause-After-DownloadOnlyIfErrortrue, aptitude
will display a message after it finishes downloading
packages, asking you if you want to continue with the
installation. If it is
OnlyIfError, a message will only be
displayed if a download failed. Otherwise, if the
option is set to false, aptitude
will immediately proceed to the next screen after
completing a download.
Aptitude::UI::Preview-LimitAptitude::UI::Prompt-On-Exittruetrue,
aptitude will display a confirmation prompt
before shutting down.
Aptitude::UI::StylesAptitude::UI::ViewTabstruefalse,
aptitude will not display “tabs”
describing the currently active views at the top of
the screen.
Aptitude::Warn-Not-Roottruetrue,
aptitude will detect when you need root
privileges to do something, and ask you whether
you want to switch to the root account if you
aren't root already. See the section called “Becoming root” for more
information.
DebTags::Vocabulary/usr/share/debtags/vocabularydebtags
vocabulary file; used to load in the package tag
metadata.