Provided by: debmirror_2.16ubuntu1.1_all bug

NAME

       debmirror - Debian partial mirror script, with ftp, http or rsync and package pool support

SYNOPSIS

       debmirror [options] mirrordir

DESCRIPTION

       This program downloads and maintains a partial local Ubuntu mirror. It can mirror any
       combination of architectures, distributions, and sections. Files are transferred by ftp,
       and package pools are fully supported. It also does locking and updates trace files.

       The partial mirror created by this program is not suitable to be used as a public Debian
       mirror. If that is your aim, you should instead follow the instructions at
       <http://www.debian.org/mirrors/ftpmirror>.

       This program mirrors in three steps.

       1. download Packages and Sources files
           First it downloads all Packages and Sources files for the subset of Ubuntu it was
           instructed to get.

       2. download everything else
           The Packages and Sources files are scanned, to build up a list of all the files they
           refer to. A few other miscellaneous files are added to the list.  Then the program
           makes sure that each file in the list is present on the local mirror and is up-to-
           date, using file size (and optionally checksum) checks.  Any necessary files are
           downloaded.

       3. clean up unknown files
           Any files and directories on the local mirror that are not in the list are removed.

OPTIONS

       mirrordir
           This required (unless defined in a configuration file) parameter specifies where the
           local mirror directory is. If the directory does not exist, it will be created. Be
           careful; telling this program that your home directory is the mirrordir is guaranteed
           to replace your home directory with an Ubuntu mirror!

       -p, --progress
           Displays progress bars as files are downloaded.

       -v, --verbose
           Displays progress between file downloads.

       --debug
           Enables verbose debug output, including ftp protocol dump.

       --dry-run
           Simulate a mirror run. This will still download the meta files to the ./.temp working
           directory, but won't replace the old meta files, won't download debs and source files
           and only simulates cleanup.

       --skip-installer=foo[,bar,..]
           Don't download debian-installer files for the specified distribution.

       --help
           Display a usage summary.

       -h, --host=remotehost
           Specify the remote host to mirror from. Defaults to archive.ubuntu.com, you are
           strongly encouraged to find a closer mirror.

       -r, --root=directory
           Specifies the directory on the remote host that is the root of the Ubuntu archive.
           Defaults to ubuntu, which will work for most mirrors. The root directory has a dists
           subdirectory.

       --method=method
           Specify the method to download files. Currently, supported methods are ftp, http,
           https, and rsync.

       --passive
           Download in passive mode when using ftp.

       -u, --user=remoteusername
           Specify the remote user name to use to log into the remote host.  Defaults to
           "anonymous".

       --passwd=remoteuserpassword
           Specify the remote user password to use to log into the remote ftp host.  It is used
           with --user and defaults to "anonymous@".

       --proxy=http://user:pass@url:port/
           Specifies the http proxy (like Squid) to use for http or ftp methods.

       -d, --dist=foo[,bar,..]
           Specify the distribution (lucid, oneiric, precise) of Ubuntu to mirror. This switch
           may be used multiple times, and multiple distributions may be specified at once,
           separated by commas.

           You may also use the stable, testing, unstable, names.

       --omit-suite-symlinks
           With this option set, debmirror will not create the symlink from suite to codename.
           This is needed for example when mirroring archived Debian releases as they will all
           have either "stable" or "oldstable" as suite in their Release files.

       -s, --section=foo[,bar,..]
           Specify the section of Ubuntu to mirror. Defaults to
           "main,contrib,non-free,main/debian-installer".

       -a, --arch=foo[,bar,..]
           Specify the architectures to mirror. The default is --arch=i386.  Specifying
           --arch=none will mirror no archs.

       --rsync-extra=foo[,bar,..]
           Allows to also mirror files from a number of directories that are not part of the
           package archive itself.

           Debmirror will always use rsync for the transfer of these files, irrespective of what
           transfer method is specified in the --method option.  This will therefore not work if
           your remote mirror does not support rsync, or if the mirror needs a different --root
           option for rsync than for the main transfer method specified with --method.

           Note that excluding individual files in the directories is not supported.

           The following values are supported.

           doc
             Download all files and subdirectories in doc directory, and all README files in the
             root directory of the archive.

           indices
             Download all files and subdirectories in indices directory. Note that this directory
             can contain some rather large files; don't include this type unless you know you
             need these files.

           tools
             Download all files and subdirectories in tools directory.

           trace
             Download the remote mirror's trace files for the archive (project/trace/*).  This is
             enabled by default.

           none
             This can be used to disable getting extra files with rsync.

           If specified, the update of trace files will be done at the beginning of the mirror
           run; the other types are done near the end.

           This switch may be used multiple times, and multiple values may be specified at once,
           separated by commas; unknown values are ignored.

       --di-dist=dists | foo[,bar,..]
           Mirror current Debian Installer images for the specified dists.  See further the
           section "Mirroring Debian Installer images" below.

       --di-arch=arches | foo[,bar,..]
           Mirror current Debian Installer images for the specified architectures.  See further
           the section "Mirroring Debian Installer images" below.

       --source
           Include source in the mirror (default).

       --nosource
           Do not include source.

       --i18n
           Additionally download Translation-<lang>.bz2 files, which contain translations of
           package descriptions. Selection of specific translations is possible using the
           --include and --exclude options. The default is to download only the English file.

       --getcontents
           Additionally download Contents.<arch>.gz files. Note that these files can be
           relatively big and can change frequently, especially for the testing and unstable
           suites. Use of the available diff files is strongly recommended (see the --diff
           option).

       --checksums
           Use checksums to determine if files on the local mirror that are the correct size
           actually have the correct content. Not enabled by default, because it is too paranoid,
           and too slow.

           When the state cache is used, debmirror will only check checksums during runs where
           the cache has expired or been invalidated, so it is worth considering to use these two
           options together.

       --ignore-missing-release
           Don't fail if the Release file is missing.

       --check-gpg, --no-check-gpg
           Controls whether gpg signatures from the Release.gpg file should be checked. The
           default is to check signatures.

       --keyring=file
           Use file as an additional gpg-format keyring.  May be given multiple times.

           Note that these will be used in addition to $GNUPGHOME/trustedkeys.gpg.  The latter
           can be removed from the set of keyrings by setting $GNUPGHOME to something non-
           existent when using this option.

           On a typical Debian system, the Debian archive keyring can be used directly with this
           option:

               debmirror --keyring /usr/share/keyrings/debian-archive-keyring.gpg ...

       --ignore-release-gpg
           Don't fail if the Release.gpg file is missing. If the file does exist, it is mirrored
           and verified, but any errors are ignored.

       --ignore=regex
           Never delete any files whose filenames match the regex. May be used multiple times.

       --exclude=regex
           Never download any files whose filenames match the regex. May be used multiple times.

       --include=regex
           Don't exclude any files whose filenames match the regex. May be used multiple times.

       --exclude-deb-section=regex
           Never download any files whose Debian Section (games, doc, oldlibs, science, ...)
           match the regex. May be used multiple times.

       --limit-priority=regex
           Limit download to files whose Debian Priority (required, extra, optional, ...) match
           the regex. May be used multiple times.

       --exclude-field=fieldname=regex
           Never download any binary packages where the contents of fieldname match the regex.
           May be used multiple times. If this option is used and the mirror includes source
           packages, only those source packages corresponding to included binary packages will be
           downloaded.

       --include-field=fieldname=regex
           Don't exclude any binary packages where the contents of fieldname match the regex. May
           be used multiple times. If this option is used and the mirror includes source
           packages, only those source packages corresponding to included binary packages will be
           downloaded.

       -t, --timeout=seconds
           Specifies the timeout to use for network operations (either FTP or rsync).  Set this
           to a higher value if you experience failed downloads. Defaults to 300 seconds.

       --max-batch=number
           Download at most max-batch number of files (and ignore rest).

       --rsync-batch=number
           Download at most number of files with each rsync call and then loop.

       --rsync-options=options
           Specify alternative rsync options to be used. Default options are "-aL --partial".
           Care must be taken when specifying alternative options not to disrupt operations, it's
           best to only add to those options.

           The most likely option to add is "--bwlimit=x" to avoid saturating the bandwidth of
           your link.

       --postcleanup
           Clean up the local mirror but only after mirroring is complete and only if there was
           no error.

           This is the default, because it ensures that the mirror is consistent at all times.

       --precleanup
           Clean up the local mirror before starting mirroring.

           This option may be useful if you have limited disk space, but it will result in an
           inconsistent mirror when debmirror is running.

           The deprecated --cleanup option also enables this mode.

       --nocleanup
           Do not clean up the local mirror.

       --skippackages
           Don't re-download Packages and Sources files.  Useful if you know they are up-to-date.

       --diff=use|mirror|none
           If --diff=use is specified and the Release file contains entries for diff files, then
           debmirror will attempt to use them to update Packages, Sources, and Contents files
           (which can significantly reduce the download size for meta files), but will not
           include them in the mirror. This is the default behavior and avoids having time
           consuming diff files for a fast local mirror.

           Specifying --diff=mirror does the same as use, but will also include the downloaded
           diff files in the local mirror. Specify --diff=none to completely ignore diff files.

           Note that if rsync is used as method to download files and the archive being mirrored
           has "rsyncable" gzipped meta files, then using --diff=none may be the most efficient
           way to download them. See the gzip(1) man page for information about its rsyncable
           option.

       --gzip-options=options
           Specify alternative options to be used when calling gzip(1) to compress meta files
           after applying diffs. The default options are "-9 -n --rsyncable" which corresponds
           with the options used to gzip meta files for the main Debian archive.

           These options may need to be modified if the checksum of the file as gzipped by
           debmirror does not match the checksum listed in the Release file (which will result in
           the gzipped file being downloaded unnecessarily after diffs were successfully
           applied).

       --slow-cpu
           By default debmirror saves some bandwidth by performing cpu-intensive tasks, such as
           compressing files to generate .gz and .bz2 files. Use this mode if the computer's CPU
           is slow, and it makes more sense to use more bandwidth and less CPU.

           This option implies --diff=none.

       --state-cache-days=number
           Save the state of the mirror in a cache file between runs. The cache will expire after
           the specified number of days, at which time a full check and cleanup of the mirror
           will be done. While the cache is valid, debmirror will trust that the mirror is
           consistent with this cache.

           The cache is only used for files that have a unique name, i.e. binary packages and
           source files. If a mirror update fails for any reason, the cache will be invalidated
           and the next run will include a full check.

           Main advantage of using the state cache is that it avoids a large amount of disk
           access while checking which files need to be fetched. It may also reduce the time
           required for mirror updates.

       --ignore-small-errors
           Normally debmirror will report an error if any deb files or sources fail to download
           and refuse to update the meta data to an inconsistent mirror. Normally this is a good
           things as it indicates something went wrong during download and should be retried. But
           sometimes the upstream mirror actually is broken. Specifying --ignore-small-errors
           causes debmirror to ignore missing or broken deb and source files but still be
           pedantic about checking meta files.

       --allow-dist-rename
           The directory name for a dist should be equal to its Codename and not to a Suite. If
           the local mirror currently has directories named after Suites, debmirror can rename
           them automatically.  An existing symlink from codename to suite will be removed, but
           debmirror will automatically create a new symlink suite -> codename (immediately after
           moving meta files in place). This conversion should only be needed once.

       --disable-ssl-verification
           When https is used, debmirror checks that the SSL certificate is value.

           If the server has a self-signed certificate, the check can be disabled with this
           option.

       --debmarshal
           On each pull, keep the repository meta data from dists/* in a numbered subdirectory,
           and maintain a symlink latest to the most recent pull.  This is similar to Debmarshal
           in tracking mode, see debmarshal.debian.net for examples and use.  debmirror cleanup
           is disabled when this flag is specified.  Separate pool and snapshot cleanup utilities
           are available at
           http://code.google.com/p/debmarshal/source/browse/#svn/trunk/repository2

       --config-file=file
           Specify a configuration file. This option may be repeated to read multiple
           configuration files. By default debmirror reads /etc/debmirror.conf and
           ~/.debmirror.conf (see section FILES).

USING DEBMIRROR

   Using regular expressions in options
       Various options accept regular expressions that can be used to tune what is included in
       the mirror. They can be any regular expression valid in perl, which also means that
       extended syntax is standard. Make sure to anchor regular expressions appropriately: this
       is not done by debmirror.

       The --include and --exclude options can be combined. This combination for example will, if
       the --i18n option is used, exclude all Translation files, except for the ones for
       Portuguese (pt) and Brazillian (pt_BR):

         --exclude='/Translation-.*\.bz2$' --include='/Translation-pt.*\.bz2$'

   Mirroring Debian Installer images
       Debmirror will only mirror the "current" images that are on the remote mirror. At least
       one of the options --di-dist or --di-arch must be passed to enable mirroring of the
       images.

       The special values "dists" and "arches" can be used to tell debmirror to use the same
       dists and architectures for D-I images as for the archive, but it is also possible to
       specify different values. If either option is not set, it will default to the same values
       as for the archive.

       If you wish to create custom CD images using for example debian-cd, you will probably also
       want add the option "--rsync-extra=doc,tools".

       Limitations

       There are no progress updates displayed for D-I images.

   Archive size
       The tables in the file /usr/share/doc/debmirror/mirror_size give an indication of the
       space needed to mirror the Debian archive. They are particularly useful if you wish to set
       up a partial mirror.  Only the size of source and binary packages is included. You should
       allow for around 1-4 GB of meta data (in ./dists/<dist>) per suite (depending in your
       settings). Plus whatever space is needed for extra directories (e.g. tools, doc) you wish
       to mirror.

       The tables also show how much additional space is required if you add a release on top of
       its predecessor. Note that the additional space needed for testing and (to a lesser
       extend) unstable varies during the development cycle of a release. The additional space
       needed for testing is zero immediately after a stable release and grows from that time
       onwards.

       Note Debmirror keeps an extra copy of all meta data. This is necessary to guarantee that
       the local mirror stays consistent while debmirror is running.

EXAMPLES

       Simply make a mirror in /srv/mirror/debian, using all defaults (or the settings defined in
       debmirror.conf):

         debmirror /srv/mirror/debian

       Make a mirror of i386 and amd64 binaries, main and universe only, and include both LTS and
       latest versions of Ubuntu; download from 'archive.ubuntu.com':

         debmirror -a i386,amd64 -d lucid -d precise -s main,universe --nosource \
                   -h archive.ubuntu.com --progress $HOME/mirror/debian

       Make a mirror using rsync (rsync server is 'ftp.debian.org::debian'), excluding the
       section 'debug' and the package 'foo-doc':

         debmirror -e rsync $HOME/mirror/debian --exclude='/foo-doc_' \
                   --exclude-deb-section='^debug$'

FILES

         /etc/debmirror.conf
         ~/.debmirror.conf

           Debmirror will look for the presence of these files and load them
           in the indicated order if they exist.
           See the example in /usr/share/doc/debmirror/examples for syntax.

         ~/.gnupg/trustedkeys.gpg

           When gpg checking is enabled,
           debmirror uses gpgv to verify Release and Release.gpg using the
           default keying ~/.gnupg/trustedkeys.gpg. This can be changed by
           exporting GNUPGHOME resulting in $GNUPGHOME/trustedkeys.gpg being
           used.  (Note that keyring files can also be specified directly
           with debmirror's --keyring option -- see above).

           To add the right key to this keyring you can import it from the
           ubuntu keyring (in case of the Ubuntu archive) using:

             gpg --keyring /usr/share/keyrings/ubuntu-archive-keyring.gpg --export \
                 | gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring trustedkeys.gpg --import

           or download the key from a keyserver:

             gpg --no-default-keyring --keyring trustedkeys.gpg \
                 --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys <key ID>

           The <key ID> can be found in the gpgv error message in debmirror:
           gpgv: Signature made Tue Jan 23 09:07:53 2007 CET using DSA key ID 2D230C5F

COPYRIGHT

       This program is copyright 2000-2001, 2010 by Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>, under the terms
       of the GNU GPL (either version 2 of the licence or, at your option, any later version),
       copyright 2001-2002 by Joerg Wendland <joergland@debian.org>, copyright 2003-2007 by
       Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de> and copyright 2009-2010 by Frans Pop
       <fjp@debian.org>.

       The author disclaims any responsibility for any mangling of your system, unexpected
       bandwidth usage bills, meltdown of the Debian/Ubuntu mirror network, etc, that this script
       may cause. See NO WARRANTY section of GPL.

AUTHOR

        Author and current maintainer:
          Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>

        Previous maintainers:
          Joerg Wendland <joergland@debian.org>
          Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-v-b@web.de>
          Frans Pop <fjp@debian.org>

MOTTO

       Waste bandwith -- put a partial mirror on your laptop today!