From 274322b84acc35f6a4c4bff08cfdce25cfe46c3b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: V3n3RiX Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2021 01:06:08 +0100 Subject: app-misc/calamares-config-redcore : version bump --- .../files/modules/packages.conf | 157 --------------------- 1 file changed, 157 deletions(-) (limited to 'app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/packages.conf') diff --git a/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/packages.conf b/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/packages.conf index 52ef498e..71a1f4fe 100644 --- a/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/packages.conf +++ b/app-misc/calamares-config-redcore/files/modules/packages.conf @@ -1,167 +1,10 @@ --- -# -# Which package manager to use, options are: -# - packagekit - PackageKit CLI tool -# - zypp - Zypp RPM frontend -# - yum - Yum RPM frontend -# - dnf - DNF, the new RPM frontend -# - urpmi - Mandriva package manager -# - apt - APT frontend for DEB and RPM -# - pacman - Pacman -# - portage - Gentoo package manager -# - entropy - Sabayon package manager -# - apk = Alpine Linux package manager -# - dummy - Dummy manager, only logs -# backend: portage -# -# Often package installation needs an internet connection. -# Since you may allow system installation without a connection -# and want to offer OPTIONAL package installation, it's -# possible to have no internet, yet have this packages module -# enabled in settings. -# -# You can skip the whole module when there is no internet -# by setting "skip_if_no_internet" to true. -# -# You can run a package-manager specific update procedure -# before installing packages (for instance, to update the -# list of packages and dependencies); this is done only if there -# is an internet connection. -# -# Set "update_db" to 'true' for refreshing the database on the -# target system. On target installations, which got installed by -# unsquashing, a full system update may be needed. Otherwise -# post-installing additional packages may result in conflicts. -# Therefore set also "update_system" to 'true'. -# skip_if_no_internet: false update_db: false update_system: false -# -# List of maps with package operations such as install or remove. -# Distro developers can provide a list of packages to remove -# from the installed system (for instance packages meant only -# for the live system). -# -# A job implementing a distro specific logic to determine other -# packages that need to be installed or removed can run before -# this one. Distro developers may want to install locale packages -# or remove drivers not needed on the installed system. -# Such a job would populate a list of dictionaries in the global -# storage called "packageOperations" and that list is processed -# after the static list in the job configuration (i.e. the list -# that is in this configuration file). -# -# Allowed package operations are: -# - *install*, *try_install*: will call the package manager to -# install one or more packages. The install target will -# abort the whole installation if package-installation -# fails, while try_install carries on. Packages may be -# listed as (localized) names, or as (localized) package-data. -# See below for the description of the format. -# - *localInstall*: this is used to call the package manager -# to install a package from a path-to-a-package. This is -# useful if you have a static package archive on the install media. -# The *pacman* package manager is the only one to specially support -# this operation (all others treat this the same as *install*). -# - *remove*, *try_remove*: will call the package manager to -# remove one or more packages. The remove target will -# abort the whole installation if package-removal fails, -# while try_remove carries on. Packages may be listed as -# (localized) names. -# One additional key is recognized, to help netinstall out: -# - *source*: ignored, does get logged -# Any other key is ignored, and logged as a warning. -# -# There are two formats for naming packages: as a name or as package-data, -# which is an object notation providing package-name, as well as pre- and -# post-install scripts. -# -# Here are both formats, for installing vi. The first one just names the -# package for vi (using the naming of the installed package manager), while -# the second contains three data-items; the pre-script is run before invoking -# the package manager, and the post-script runs once it is done. -# -# - install -# - vi -# - package: vi -# pre-script: touch /tmp/installing-vi -# post-script: rm -f /tmp/installing-vi -# -# The pre- and post-scripts are optional, but you cannot leave both out -# if you do use the *package* key: using "package: vi" with neither script -# option will trick Calamares into trying to install a package named -# "package: vi", which is unlikely to work. -# -# The pre- and post-scripts are **not** executed by a shell unless you -# explicitly invoke `/bin/sh` in them. The command-lines are passed -# to exec(), which does not understand shell syntax. In other words: -# -# pre-script: ls | wc -l -# -# Will fail, because `|` is passed as a command-line argument to ls, -# as are `wc`, and `-l`. No shell pipeline is set up, and ls is likely -# to complain. Invoke the shell explicitly: -# -# pre-script: /bin/sh -c \"ls | wc -l\" -# -# The above note on shell-expansion applies to versions up-to-and-including -# Calamares 3.2.12, but will change in future. -# -# Any package name may be localized; this is used to install localization -# packages for software based on the selected system locale. By including -# the string `LOCALE` in the package name, the following happens: -# -# - if the system locale is English (any variety), then the package is not -# installed at all, -# - otherwise `$LOCALE` or `${LOCALE}` is replaced by the 'lower-cased' BCP47 -# name of the 'language' part of the selected system locale (not the -# country/region/dialect part), e.g. selecting "nl_BE" will use "nl" -# here. -# -# Take care that just plain `LOCALE` will not be replaced, so `foo-LOCALE` will -# be left unchanged, while `foo-$LOCALE` will be changed. However, `foo-LOCALE` -# **will** be removed from the list of packages (i.e. not installed), if -# English is selected. If a non-English locale is selected, then `foo-LOCALE` -# will be installed, unchanged (no language-name-substitution occurs). -# -# The following installs localizations for vi, if they are relevant; if -# there is no localization, installation continues normally. -# -# - install -# - vi-$LOCALE -# - package: vi-${LOCALE} -# pre-script: touch /tmp/installing-vi -# post-script: rm -f /tmp/installing-vi -# -# When installing packages, Calamares will invoke the package manager -# with a list of package names if it can; package-data prevents this because -# of the scripts that need to run. In other words, this: -# -# - install: -# - vi -# - binutils -# - package: wget -# pre-script: touch /tmp/installing-wget -# -# This will invoke the package manager three times, once for each package, -# because not all of them are simple package names. You can speed up the -# process if you have only a few pre-scripts, by using multiple install targets: -# -# - install: -# - vi -# - binutils -# - install: -# - package: wget -# pre-script: touch /tmp/installing-wget -# -# This will call the package manager once with the package-names "vi" and -# "binutils", and then a second time for "wget". When installing large numbers -# of packages, this can lead to a considerable time savings. -# operations: - remove: - app-admin/calamares -- cgit v1.2.3