### Manage login configuration settings for an APT source or proxy in `/etc/apt/auth.conf`
-Starting with APT version 1.5 you can define login configuration settings (like
-username and password) for APT sources or proxies that require authentication
-in the file `/etc/apt/auth.conf`. This is preferable to embedding login
-information directly in `source.list` entries which are usually world-readable.
+Starting with APT version 1.5, you can define login configuration settings, such as
+username and password, for APT sources or proxies that require authentication
+in the `/etc/apt/auth.conf` file. This is preferable to embedding login
+information directly in `source.list` entries, which are usually world-readable.
-The file `/etc/apt/auth.conf` follows the format of netrc (as used by ftp or
+The `/etc/apt/auth.conf` file follows the format of netrc (used by ftp or
curl) and has restrictive file permissions. See
https://manpages.debian.org/testing/apt/apt_auth.conf.5.en.html for details.
Use the optional `apt::auth_conf_entries` parameter to specify an array of
hashes containing login configuration settings. These hashes may only contain
-the keys `machine`, `login` and `password`.
+the `machine`, `login` and `password` keys.
```puppet
class { 'apt':
## Limitations
-This module is tested and officially supported on Debian 6 and 7 and Ubuntu 10.04, 12.04, and 14.04. Testing on other platforms has been light and cannot be guaranteed.
+This module is tested and officially supported on Debian 8 and 9 and Ubuntu 14.04, and 16.04. Testing on other platforms has been light and cannot be guaranteed.
This module is not designed to be split across [run stages](https://docs.puppetlabs.com/puppet/latest/reference/lang_run_stages.html).