diff options
| author | Manuel Traut <manut@mecka.net> | 2011-04-29 09:09:27 +0200 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Manuel Traut <manut@mecka.net> | 2011-04-29 09:09:27 +0200 |
| commit | 5238ad5a0c4a9e1c8cd036f5de4055e39bd71297 (patch) | |
| tree | 4407c087b9fb5432b1dc11e70b52dacfa0b99feb /beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf | |
| parent | 60ead65c41afba7e6aa4bbcf507a1d52f7a8fe9f (diff) | |
added debootstrap stuff
Signed-off-by: Manuel Traut <manut@mecka.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf')
| -rw-r--r-- | beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf | 83 |
1 files changed, 83 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf b/beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..549c1d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/beagle/debian-rfs/etc/debconf.conf @@ -0,0 +1,83 @@ +# This is the main config file for debconf. It tells debconf where to +# store data. The format of this file is a set of stanzas. Each stanza +# except the first sets up a database for debconf to use. For details, see +# debconf.conf(5) (in the debconf-doc package). +# +# So first things first. This first stanza gives the names of two databases. + +# Debconf will use this database to store the data you enter into it, +# and some other dynamic data. +Config: configdb +# Debconf will use this database to store static template data. +Templates: templatedb + +# World-readable, and accepts everything but passwords. +Name: config +Driver: File +Mode: 644 +Reject-Type: password +Filename: /var/cache/debconf/config.dat + +# Not world readable (the default), and accepts only passwords. +Name: passwords +Driver: File +Mode: 600 +Backup: false +Required: false +Accept-Type: password +Filename: /var/cache/debconf/passwords.dat + +# Set up the configdb database. By default, it consists of a stack of two +# databases, one to hold passwords and one for everything else. +Name: configdb +Driver: Stack +Stack: config, passwords + +# Set up the templatedb database, which is a single flat text file +# by default. +Name: templatedb +Driver: File +Mode: 644 +Filename: /var/cache/debconf/templates.dat + +# Well that was pretty straightforward, and it will be enough for most +# people's needs, but debconf's database drivers can be used to do much +# more interesting things. For example, suppose you want to use config +# data from another host, which is mounted over nfs or perhaps the database +# is accessed via LDAP. You don't want to write to the remote debconf database, +# just read from it, so you still need a local database for local changes. +# +# A remote NFS mounted database, read-only. It is optional; if debconf +# fails to use it it will not abort. +#Name: remotedb +#Driver: DirTree +#Directory: /mnt/otherhost/var/cache/debconf/config +#Readonly: true +#Required: false +# +# A remote LDAP database. It is also read-only. The password is really +# only necessary if the database is not accessible anonymously. +# Option KeyByKey instructs the backend to retrieve keys from the LDAP +# server individually (when they are requested), instead of loading all +# keys at startup. The default is 0, and should only be enabled if you +# want to track accesses to individual keys on the LDAP server side. +#Name: remotedb +#Driver: LDAP +#Server: remotehost +#BaseDN: cn=debconf,dc=domain,dc=com +#BindDN: uid=admin,dc=domain,dc=com +#BindPasswd: secret +#KeyByKey: 0 +# +# A stack consisting of two databases. Values will be read from +# the first database in the stack to contain a value. In this example, +# writes always go to the first database. +#Name: fulldb +#Driver: Stack +#Stack: configdb, remotedb +# +# In this example, we'd use Config: fulldb at the top of the file +# to make it use the combination of the databases. +# +# Even more complex and interesting setups are possible, see the +# debconf.conf(5) page for details. |
