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author | Arch Librarian <arch@canonical.com> | 2004-09-20 16:51:01 +0000 |
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committer | Arch Librarian <arch@canonical.com> | 2004-09-20 16:51:01 +0000 |
commit | dd80ca3ca82976b94244a6d05092da5029fa0107 (patch) | |
tree | 8341f87f54d65028381b6829115e9ab1d5928612 /doc/method.sgml | |
parent | 0a8e3465cb644e380ab0fc6d66f6d1f17363b34e (diff) |
Method doc created
Author: jgg
Date: 1998-10-04 04:49:16 GMT
Method doc created
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/method.sgml')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/method.sgml | 324 |
1 files changed, 324 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/method.sgml b/doc/method.sgml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..756dce87f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/method.sgml @@ -0,0 +1,324 @@ +<!doctype debiandoc system> +<!-- -*- mode: sgml; mode: fold -*- --> +<book> +<title>APT Method Interface </title> + +<author>Jason Gunthorpe <email>jgg@debian.org</email></author> +<version>$Id: method.sgml,v 1.1 1998/10/04 04:49:17 jgg Exp $</version> + +<abstract> +This document describes the interface that APT uses to the archive +access methods. +</abstract> + +<copyright> +Copyright © Jason Gunthorpe, 1998. +<p> +"APT" and this document are free software; you can redistribute them and/or +modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published +by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your +option) any later version. + +<p> +For more details, on Debian GNU/Linux systems, see the file +/usr/doc/copyright/GPL for the full license. +</copyright> + +<toc sect> + +<chapt>Introduction +<!-- General {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>General + +<p> +The APT method interface allows APT to aquire archive files (.deb), index +files (Packages, Revision, Mirrors) and source files (.tar.gz, .diff). It +is a general, extensible system designed to satisfy all of these +requirements: + +<enumlist> +<item>Remote methods that download files from a distant site +<item>Resume of aborted downloads +<item>Progress reporting +<item>If-Modified-Since (IMS) checking for index files +<item>In-Line MD5 generation +<item>No-copy in-filesystem methods +<item>Multi-media methods (like CD's) +<item>Dynamic source selection for failure recovery +<item>User interaction for user/password requests and media swaps +<item>Global configuration +</enumlist> + +Initial releases of APT (0.1.x) used a completely different method +interface that only supported the first 6 items. This new interface +deals with the remainder. +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> +<!-- Terms {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>Terms + +<p> +Several terms are used through out the document, they have specific +meanings which may not be immediately evident. To clarify they are summarized +here. + +<taglist> +<tag>source<item> +Refers to an item in source list. More specifically it is the broken down +item, that is each source maps to exactly one index file. Archive sources +map to Package files and Source Code sources map to Source files. + +<tag>archive file<item> +Refers to a binary package archive (.deb, .rpm, etc). + +<tag>source file<item> +Refers to one of the files making up the source code of a package. In +debian it is one of .diff.gz, .dsc. or .tar.gz. + +<tag>URI<item> +Universal Resource Identifier (URI) is a super-set of the familiar URL +syntax used by web browsers. It consists of an access specification +followed by a specific location in that access space. The form is +<access>:<location>. Network addresses are given with the form +<access>://[<user>:<pas>>@]hostname[:port]/<location>. +Some examples: +<example> +file:/var/mirrors/debian/ +ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian +ftp://jgg:MooCow@localhost:21/debian +nfs://bigred/var/mirrors/debian +rsync://debian.midco.net/debian +cdrom:Debian 2.0r1 Disk 1/ +</example> + +<tag>method<item> +There is a one to one mapping of URI access specifiers to methods. A method +is a program that knows how to handle a URI access type and operates according +to the specifications in this file. + +<tag>method instance<item> +A specific running method. There can be more than one instance of each method +as APT is capable of concurrent method handling. + +<tag>message<item> +A series of lines terminated by a blank line sent down one of the +communication lines. The first line should have the form xxx TAG +where xxx are digits forming the status code and TAG is an informational +string + +<tag>aquire<item> +The act of bring a URI into the local pathname space. This may simply +be verifiying the existance of the URI or actually downloading it from +a remote site. + +</taglist> + +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> +<chapt>Specification +<!-- Overview {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>Overview + +<p> +All methods operate as a sub process of a main controlling parent. 3 FD's +are opened for use by the method allowing two way communication and +emergency error reporting. The FD's corrispond to the well known unix FD's, +stdin, stdout and stderr. + +<p> +The basic startup sequence depends on how the method is invoked. If any +command line arguments are passed then the method should start in +automatic mode. This facility is provided soley to make the methods +easier to test and perhaps use outside of APT. Upon startup the method +will print out a header describing its capabilities and requirements. +After that it either begins processing the command line arugments and +exits when done or waits for commands to be fed to it. + +<p> +Throught operation of the method communication is done via http +style plain text. Specifically RFC-822 (like the Package file) fields +are used to describe items and a numeric-like header is used to indicate +what is happening. Each of these distinct communication messages should be +sent quickly and without pause. + +<p> +In some instances APT may pre-invoke a method to allow things like file +URI's to determine how many files are available locally. +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> +<!-- Message Overview {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>Message Overview + +<p> +The first line of each message is called the message header. The first +3 digits (called the Status Code) have the usual meaning found in the +http protocol. 1xx is informational, 2xx is successfull and 4xx is failure. +The 6xx series is used to specify things sent to the method. After the +status code is an informational string provided for visual debugging. + +<list> +<item>100 Capabilities - Method capabilities +<item>101 Log - General Logging +<item>102 Status - Inter-URI status reporting (login progress) +<item>200 URI Start - URI is starting aquire +<item>201 URI Done - URI is finished aquire +<item>400 URI Failure - URI has failed to aquire +<item>401 General Failure - Method did not like something sent to it +<item>402 Authorization Required - Method requires authorization + to access the URI. Authorization is User/Pass +<item>403 Media Failure - Method requires a media change +<item>600 URI Aquire - Request a URI be aquired +<item>601 Configuration - Sends the configuration space +<item>602 Authorization Credentials - Response to the 402 message +<item>603 Media Changed - Response to the 403 message +<item>605 Shutdown - Exit +</list> + +Only the 6xx series of status codes is sent TO the method. Furthermore +the method may not emit status codes in the 6xx range. The Codes 402 +and 403 require that the method continue reading all other 6xx codes +until the proper 602/603 code is recieved. This means the method must be +capable of handling an unlimited number of 600 messages. + +<p> +The flow of messages starts with the method sending out a +<em>100 Capabilities</> and APT sending out a <em>601 Configuration</>. +After that APT begins sending <em>600 URI Aquire</> and the method +sends out <em>200 URI Start</>, <em>201 URI Done</> or +<em>400 URI Failure</>. No syncronization is performed, it is expected +that APT will send <em>600 URI Aquire</> messages at -any- time and +that the method should queue the messages. This allows methods like http +to pipeline requests to the remote server. It should be noted however +that APT will buffer messages so it is not neccessary for the method +to be constantly ready to recieve them. +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> +<!-- Header Fields {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>Header Fields + +<p> +The following is a short index of the header fields that are supported + +<taglist> +<tag>URI<item>URI being described by the message +<tag>Filename<item>Location in the filesystem +<tag>Last-Modified<item>A time stamp in RFC1123 notation for use by IMS checks +<tag>Size<item>Size of the file in bytes +<tag>Resume-Point<item>Location that transfer was started +<tag>MD5-Hash<item>Computed MD5 hash for the file +<tag>Message<item>String indicating some displayable message +<tag>Media<item>String indicating the media name required +<tag>Site<item>String indicating the site authorization is required for +<tag>User<item>Username for authorization +<tag>Password<item>Password for authorization +<tag>Config-Item<item> +A string of the form <var>item</>=<var>value</> derived from the APT +configuration space. These may include method specific values and general +values not related to the method. It is up to the method to filter out +the ones it wants. +<tag>Single-Instance<item>Requires that only one instance of the method be run + This is a yes/no value. +<tag>Pre-Scan<item>Method can detect if archives are already available. + This is a yes/no value. +<tag>Version<item>Version string for the method +</taglist> + +This is a list of which headers each status code can use + +<taglist> +<tag>100 Capabilities<item> +Displays the capabilities of the method. +Fields: Version, Single-Interface, Pre-Scan + +<tag>101 Log<item> +A log message may be printed to the screen if debugging is enabled. This +is only for debugging the method. +Fields: Message + +<tag>102 Status<item> +Message gives a progress indication for the method. It can be used to show +pre-transfer status for internet type methods. +Fields: Message + +<tag>200 URI Start<item> +Indicates the URI is starting to be transfered. The URI is specified +along with stats about the file itself. +Fields: URI, Size, Last-Modified, Resume-Point + +<tag>201 URI Done<item> +Indicates that a URI has completed being transfered. It is possible +to specify a <em>201 URI Done</> without a <em>URI Start</> which would +mean no data was transfered but the file is now available. A Filename +field is specified when the URI is directly available in the local +pathname space. APT will either directly use that file or copy it into +another location. +Fields: URI, Size, Last-Modified, Filename, MD5-Hash + +<tag>400 URI Failure<item> +Indicates a fatal URI failure. The URI is not retrievable from this source. +As with <em>201 URI Done</> <em>200 URI Start</> is not required to preceed +this message +Fields: URI, Message + +<tag>401 General Failure<item> +Indicates that some unspecific failure has occured and the method is unable +to continue. The method should terminate after sending this message. It +is intended to check for invalid configuration options or other severe +conditions. +Fields: Message + +<tag>402 Authorization Required<item> +The method requires a Username and Password pair to continue. After sending +this message the method will expect APT to send a <em>602 Authorization +Credentials</> message with the required information. It is possible for +a method to send this multiple times. +Fields: Site + +<tag>403 Media Failure<item> +A method that deals with multiple media requires that a new media be inserted. +The Media field contains the name of the media to be inserted. +Fields: Media + +<tag>600 URI Aquire<item> +APT is requesting that a new URI be added to the aquire list. Last-Modified +has the time stamp of the currently cache file if applicable. Filename +is the name of the file that the aquired URI should be written to. +Fields: URI, Filename Last-Modified + +<tag>601 Configuration<item> +APT is sending the configuration space to the method. A series of +Config-Item fields will be part of this message, each containing an entry +from the configuration space. +Fields: Config-Item. + +<tag>602 Authorization Credentials<item> +This is sent in response to a <em>402 Authorization Required</> message. +It contains the entered username and password. +Fields: Site, User, Password + +<tag>603 Media Changed<item> +This is sent in response to a <em>403 Media Failure</> message. It +indicates that the user has changed media and it is safe to proceed. +Fields: Media + +<tag>605 Shutdown<item> +APT sends this to signal the shutdown of the method. The method should +terminate immidiately. +Fields: None +</taglist> + +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> +<!-- Examples {{{ --> +<!-- ===================================================================== --> +<sect>Examples + +</sect> + <!-- }}} --> + +</book> |