# Configuration file for XBPS. # ============================ # # Root directory. #RootDir = / # # Cache directory to store downloaded binary packages. # If string begins with '/' it will be treated as full path, # otherwise it will be treated as relative to the root-directory. #CacheDir = var/cache/xbps # # Default global limit of cached connections when fetching files. #FetchCacheConnection = 10 # # Default per-host limit of cached connections when fetching files. #FetchCacheConnectionPerHost = 3 # # Default timeout limit for connections, in seconds. #FetchTimeoutConnection = 30 # # Enable syslog messages, set the value to false or 0 to disable. #Syslog = true # Number of packages to be processed in a transaction to trigger # a flush to the master package database. Set it to 0 to make it # only flush at required points. # #TransactionFrequencyFlush = 25 # Repositories. # # You can specify here your list of repositories, the first # repository that contains a package will be used for most # targets in xbps-bin(8) and xbps-repo(8), with the exception # for updating on which all repositories will be looked at and # the newest version will be choosen. # # Optionally a non default HTTP port can also be specified such as: # http://foo.local:8080/xbps-repo # # The order matters, and the top-most matching a package pattern # or name will be used. # # By default we use the official "public" repositories. You can add # your own repositories by specifying the path (without the trailing # '/' character) to the directory where the index.plist file is stored. # # Repositories not matching the host architecture are simply ignored. # repositories = { http://xbps.goodluckwith.us/binpkgs/i686, http://xbps.goodluckwith.us/binpkgs/noarch, http://xbps.goodluckwith.us/binpkgs/nonfree/i686, http://xbps.nopcode.org/repos/current/x86_64, http://xbps.nopcode.org/repos/current/noarch, http://xbps.nopcode.org/repos/current/nonfree/x86_64 } # Virtual packages. # # The following syntax is used: # virtual-package { targets = } # # If a package supports multiple virtual packages these can be # specified in the 'targets' option such as: # # virtual-package foo { targets = blah-0, baz-1, ... } #