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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>