overlay/Documentation/ls_pro_live/root_overlay/etc/layman/layman.cfg
2010-10-03 09:25:35 +00:00

83 lines
2.4 KiB
INI

[MAIN]
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Defines the directory where overlays should be installed
storage : /var/lib/layman
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Remote overlay lists will be stored here
# layman will append _md5(url).xml to each filename
cache : %(storage)s/cache
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# The list of locally installed overlays
local_list: %(storage)s/overlays.xml
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Path to the make.conf file that should be modified by
# layman
make_conf : %(storage)s/make.conf
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# URLs of the remote lists of overlays (one per line) or
# local overlay definitions
#
#overlays : http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/overlays/repositories.xml
# http://dev.gentoo.org/~wrobel/layman/global-overlays.xml
# http://mydomain.org/my-layman-list.xml
# file:///var/lib/layman/my-list.xml
overlays : http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/overlays/repositories.xml
http://ftp.disconnected-by-peer.at/pub/overlay/geos_one-overlay.xml
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Proxy support
# If unset, layman will use the http_proxy environment variable.
#
#proxy : http://[user:pass@]www.my-proxy.org:3128
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Strict checking of overlay definitions
#
# Set either to "yes" or "no". If "no" layman will issue
# warnings if an overlay definition is missing either
# description or contact information.
#
nocheck : yes
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Umask settings
#
# layman should usually work with a umask of 0022. You should
# only change this setting if you are absolutely certain that
# you know what you are doing.
#
#umask : 0022
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# Command overrides
#
# You can have commands point to either a binary at a different
# location, e.g.
#
# /home/you/local/bin/git
#
# or just the command, e.g.
#
# git
#
# to use PATH-based resolution of the binary to call.
#
#bzr_command : /usr/bin/bzr
#cvs_command : /usr/bin/cvs
#darcs_command : /usr/bin/darcs
#git_command : /usr/bin/git
#mercurial_command : /usr/bin/hg
#rsync_command : /usr/bin/rsync
#svn_command : /usr/bin/svn
#tar_command : /bin/tar