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diff --git a/includes/etch/install/doc/FAQ/html/footnotes.html b/includes/etch/install/doc/FAQ/html/footnotes.html index 37d57bb..c18fdfb 100644..120000 --- a/includes/etch/install/doc/FAQ/html/footnotes.html +++ b/includes/etch/install/doc/FAQ/html/footnotes.html @@ -1,112 +1 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN"> - -<html> - -<head> - -<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> - -<title>The Debian GNU/Linux FAQ - Footnotes</title> - -</head> - -<body> - -<hr> - -<h1> -The Debian GNU/Linux FAQ -<br>Footnotes</h1> - -<h2><a href="ch-ftparchives.en.html#fr1" name="f1">1</a></h2> - -<p> -When the present-day sid did not exist, the FTP site organization had one major -flaw: there was an assumption that when an architecture is created in the -current unstable, it will be released when that distribution becomes the new -stable. For many architectures that isn't the case, with the result that those -directories had to be moved at release time. This was impractical because the -move would chew up lots of bandwidth. -</p> - -<p> -The archive administrators worked around this problem for several years by -placing binaries for unreleased architectures in a special directory called -"sid". For those architectures not yet released, the first time they -were released there was a link from the current stable to sid, and from then on -they were created inside the unstable tree as normal. This layout was somewhat -confusing to users. -</p> - -<p> -With the advent of package pools (see <a href="#s-pools">What's in the -<samp>pool</samp> directory?, Section 5.10</a>), binary packages began to be -stored in a canonical location in the pool, regardless of the distribution, so -releasing a distribution no longer causes large bandwidth consumption on the -mirrors (there is, however, a lot of gradual bandwidth consumption throughout -the development process). -</p> - -<h2><a href="ch-ftparchives.en.html#fr2" name="f2">2</a></h2> - -<p> -<samp>dists/stable/main</samp>, <samp>dists/stable/contrib</samp>, -<samp>dists/stable/non-free</samp>, and <samp>dists/unstable/main/</samp>, etc. -</p> - -<h2><a href="ch-ftparchives.en.html#fr3" name="f3">3</a></h2> - -<p> -Historically, packages were kept in the subdirectory of <samp>dists</samp> -corresponding to which distribution contained them. This turned out to cause -various problems, such as large bandwidth consumption on mirrors when major -changes were made. This was fixed with the introduction of the package pool. -</p> - -<p> -The <samp>dists</samp> directories are still used for the index files used by -programs like <samp>apt</samp>. You may also still see paths containing -<samp>dists/potato</samp> or <samp>dists/woody</samp> in the Filename header -field of some older packages. -</p> - -<h2><a href="ch-pkgtools.en.html#fr4" name="f4">4</a></h2> - -<p> -Notice that there are ports that make this tool available with other package -management systems, like Red Hat package manager, also known as -<code>rpm</code> -</p> - -<h2><a href="ch-pkgtools.en.html#fr5" name="f5">5</a></h2> - -<p> -Although this can also lead to systems with more packages installed than they -actually need to work. -</p> - -<h2><a href="ch-support.en.html#fr6" name="f6">6</a></h2> - -<p> -Use the debian-<var>list-subject</var>-REQUEST@lists.debian.org address for -that. -</p> - -<hr> - -<p> -The Debian GNU/Linux FAQ -</p> - -<address> -version 3.1.5, 17 January 2007<br> -<br> -Authors are listed at <a href="ch-faqinfo.en.html#s-authors">Debian FAQ Authors</a><br> -<br> -</address> -<hr> - -</body> - -</html> - +footnotes.en.html
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