L+,yjO   " ! 3 | A I :a L 0  +,x)k^  %4F{RH&:oK4    Installed packages in a slackware system. Remote repository with slackware packages. This command allows changing the priority of given packages. Packages with higher priorities are considered a better option even when package versions state otherwise. Using priorities one may avoid unwanted upgrades, force downgrades, select packages in given channels as preferential, and other kinds of interesting setups. When a package has no explicit priority, the channel priority is used. The channel priority may be changed using the 'channel' command, and defaults to 0 when not set. Notice that negatives priorities must be preceded by '--' in the command line, otherwise they'll be interpreted as command line options. This command allows one to manipulate mirrors. Mirrors are URLs that supposedly provide the same contents as are available in other URLs, named origins in this help text. There is no internal restriction on the kind of information which is mirrored. Once an origin URL is provided, and one or more mirror URLs are provided, these mirrors will be considered for any file which is going to be fetched from an URL starting with the origin URL. Whether the mirror will be chosen or not will depend on the history of downloads from this mirror and from other mirrors for the same URL, since mirrors are automatically balanced so that the fastest mirror and with less errors is chosen. When errors occur, the next mirror is tried. For instance, if a mirror "http://mirror.url/path/" is provided for the origin "ftp://origin.url/other/path/", and a file in "ftp://origin.url/other/path/subpath/somefile" is going to be fetched, the mirror will be considered for being used, and the URL "http://mirror.url/path/subpath/somefile" will be used if the mirror is chosen. Notice that strings are compared and replaced without any pre-processing, so that it's possible to use URLs ending in prefixes of directory entries. This command allows querying the known packages in many different ways. Check also the 'search' command. %s (Continue/cancel): %s (Y/n): %s (continue/Cancel): %s (y/N): Argument is not a file nor url: %sShow about windowThe flag command allows configuring, removing and verifying package flags, and accepts the same options available in the command line interface.The query command allows querying package information, and accepts the same options available in the command line interface.argument is an alias and one or more key=value pairs defining a channel, or a filename/url pointing to a channel description in the same format used by --show, or a directory path where autodetection will be triedargument is an alias, and one or more key=value pairs modifying a channelinclude additional information about changes,when possibleshow channels with given aliases, or all channels if no arguments were givenshow only packages which match given descriptionProject-Id-Version: smart Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: FULL NAME POT-Creation-Date: 2008-08-14 19:56-0300 PO-Revision-Date: 2009-03-14 13:42+0000 Last-Translator: Dave Walker Language-Team: English (United Kingdom) MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Launchpad-Export-Date: 2011-09-30 09:56+0000 X-Generator: Launchpad (build 14071) Installed packages in a Slackware system. Remote repository with Slackware packages. This command allows changing the priority of given packages. Packages with higher priorities are considered a better option even when package versions state otherwise. Using priorities one may avoid unwanted upgrades, force downgrades, select packages in given channels as preferential, and other kinds of interesting setups. When a package has no explicit priority, the channel priority is used. The channel priority may be changed using the 'channel' command, and defaults to 0 when not set. Notice that negative priorities must be preceded by '--' in the command line, otherwise they'll be interpreted as command line options. This command allows one to manipulate mirrors. Mirrors are URLs that supposedly provide the same contents as are available in other URLs, named origins in this help text. There is no internal restriction on the kind of information which is mirrored. Once an origin URL is provided, and one or more mirror URLs are provided, these mirrors will be considered for any file which is going to be fetched from an URL starting with the origin URL. Whether the mirror will be chosen or not will depend on the history of downloads from this mirror and from other mirrors for the same URL, since mirrors are automatically balanced so that the fastest mirror and with least errors is chosen. When errors occur, the next mirror is tried. For instance, if a mirror "http://mirror.url/path/" is provided for the origin "ftp://origin.url/other/path/", and a file in "ftp://origin.url/other/path/subpath/somefile" is going to be fetched, the mirror will be considered for being used, and the URL "http://mirror.url/path/subpath/somefile" will be used if the mirror is chosen. Notice that strings are compared and replaced without any pre-processing, so that it's possible to use URLs ending in prefixes of directory entries. This command allows querying the known packages in many different ways. See the 'search' command as well. %s (Continue/Cancel): %s (y/n): %s (Continue/Cancel): %s (y/n): Argument is not a file nor an url: %sShow About windowThe flag command allows configuring, removing and verifying package flags and accepts the same options available in the command line interface.The query command allows querying package information and accepts the same options available in the command line interface.argument is an alias and one or more key=value pairs defining a channel or a filename/url pointing to a channel description in the same format used by --show or a directory path where autodetection will be triedargument is an alias and one or more key=value pairs modifying a channelinclude additional information about changes when possibleshow channels with given aliases or all channels if no arguments were givenshow only packages which match the given description