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Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Solr Documentation NEEDED | Solr 1.4 on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Post 302579481 by Druonysus on Monday 5th of December 2011 07:49:08 PM
Old 12-05-2011
Solr Documentation NEEDED | Solr 1.4 on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS

I have Solr 1.4 running on Tomcat6 installed in an Ubuntu 10.04 LTS openVZ container. I am looking for documentation on Solr. I need to know where Solr and Tomcat do their logging by default when installed from the standard Ubuntu apt repo. I would like to know more about both technologies but Solr in particular seems to be lacking some good documentation. Can someone point me in the right direction?
 

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APT-KEY(8)								APT								APT-KEY(8)

NAME
apt-key - APT key management utility SYNOPSIS
apt-key [--keyring filename] {add filename | del keyid | export keyid | exportall | list | finger | adv | update | net-update | {-v | --version} | {-h | --help}} DESCRIPTION
apt-key is used to manage the list of keys used by apt to authenticate packages. Packages which have been authenticated using these keys will be considered trusted. Note that if usage of apt-key is desired the additional installation of the GNU Privacy Guard suite (packaged in gnupg) is required. For this reason alone the programmatic usage (especially in package maintainerscripts!) is strongly discouraged. Further more the output format of all commands is undefined and can and does change whenever the underlying commands change. apt-key will try to detect such usage and generates warnings on stderr in these cases. SUPPORTED KEYRING FILES
apt-key supports only the binary OpenPGP format (also known as "GPG key public ring") in files with the "gpg" extension, not the keybox database format introduced in newer gpg(1) versions as default for keyring files. Binary keyring files intended to be used with any apt version should therefore always be created with gpg --export. Alternatively, if all systems which should be using the created keyring have at least apt version >= 1.4 installed, you can use the ASCII armored format with the "asc" extension instead which can be created with gpg --armor --export. COMMANDS
add filename Add a new key to the list of trusted keys. The key is read from the filename given with the parameter filename or if the filename is - from standard input. It is critical that keys added manually via apt-key are verified to belong to the owner of the repositories they claim to be for otherwise the apt-secure(8) infrastructure is completely undermined. Note: Instead of using this command a keyring should be placed directly in the /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/ directory with a descriptive name and either "gpg" or "asc" as file extension. del keyid Remove a key from the list of trusted keys. export keyid Output the key keyid to standard output. exportall Output all trusted keys to standard output. list, finger List trusted keys with fingerprints. adv Pass advanced options to gpg. With adv --recv-key you can e.g. download key from keyservers directly into the trusted set of keys. Note that there are no checks performed, so it is easy to completely undermine the apt-secure(8) infrastructure if used without care. update (deprecated) Update the local keyring with the archive keyring and remove from the local keyring the archive keys which are no longer valid. The archive keyring is shipped in the archive-keyring package of your distribution, e.g. the ubuntu-keyring package in Ubuntu. Note that a distribution does not need to and in fact should not use this command any longer and instead ship keyring files in the /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/ directory directly as this avoids a dependency on gnupg and it is easier to manage keys by simply adding and removing files for maintainers and users alike. net-update Perform an update working similarly to the update command above, but get the archive keyring from a URI instead and validate it against a master key. This requires an installed wget(1) and an APT build configured to have a server to fetch from and a master keyring to validate. APT in Debian does not support this command, relying on update instead, but Ubuntu's APT does. OPTIONS
Note that options need to be defined before the commands described in the previous section. --keyring filename With this option it is possible to specify a particular keyring file the command should operate on. The default is that a command is executed on the trusted.gpg file as well as on all parts in the trusted.gpg.d directory, though trusted.gpg is the primary keyring which means that e.g. new keys are added to this one. FILES
/etc/apt/trusted.gpg Keyring of local trusted keys, new keys will be added here. Configuration Item: Dir::Etc::Trusted. /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/ File fragments for the trusted keys, additional keyrings can be stored here (by other packages or the administrator). Configuration Item Dir::Etc::TrustedParts. SEE ALSO
apt-get(8), apt-secure(8) BUGS
APT bug page[1]. If you wish to report a bug in APT, please see /usr/share/doc/debian/bug-reporting.txt or the reportbug(1) command. AUTHOR
APT was written by the APT team <apt@packages.debian.org>. AUTHORS
Jason Gunthorpe APT team NOTES
1. APT bug page http://bugs.debian.org/src:apt APT 1.6.3ubuntu0.1 25 November 2016 APT-KEY(8)
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