You should also back up /etc since this often contains any modifications you
may have made during the installation process.
I do:
Every system file (under /; don't forget, for example, /boot/grub/menu.lst)
modified is stored under RCS.
A nightly cron job e-mails me about files
Dear debian users,
The Todai Fink Team has a project to build a website to find open
source softwares. (Roughly speaking, yet another freshmeat.)
We want to survey how often each package is insalled. If possible,
please send the list of your installed packages to
[EMAIL PROTECTED
the list of your installed packages to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
in the following format:
$$begin debian-installed-packages HOSTNAME$$
[a2ps,4.13b-5,installed ok installed]
...
[zsh,4.2.5-7,installed ok installed]
$$end debian-installed-packages HOSTNAME$$
$$begin debian-installed-packages
package is insalled. If possible,
please send the list of your installed packages to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
in the following format:
$$begin debian-installed-packages HOSTNAME$$
[a2ps,4.13b-5,installed ok installed]
...
[zsh,4.2.5-7,installed ok installed]
$$end debian-installed-packages
The problem with these instructions are the redirect rather than a pipe
and there is also a type-o.
When you set the selections on the new system you need to send the
package list to dpkg via STDIN rather than a redirect. I commented out
the bad line and replaced it with the good one.
Also, you
We want to survey how often each package is insalled.
Might http://popcon.debian.org/by_inst have the information you want?
Popcon is a volentary system allowing debian users to report the packages
they have installed.
Thus the values are not perfect, but ware at least as good as the values
Having just installed sarge from dvd, how do I make dpkg/dselect see
the complete list of available packages, and not just those already
installed by apt-get/aptitude?
--
Lars
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Announcing my new script,
http://jidanni.org/comp/debian/dpkg-repackage recreates lost .debs
from installed packages.
(Useful only if we are on an non networked island and want to install
packages onto machine B that exist on machine A, but the .debs are
gone.)
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email
On Mon, Jul 25, 2005 at 02:39:16AM +0800, Dan Jacobson wrote:
Announcing my new script,
http://jidanni.org/comp/debian/dpkg-repackage recreates lost .debs
from installed packages.
(Useful only if we are on an non networked island and want to install
packages onto machine B that exist
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 02:39:16 +0800, Dan Jacobson [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Announcing my new script,
http://jidanni.org/comp/debian/dpkg-repackage recreates lost .debs
from installed packages.
How does this differ from dpkg-repack?
# apt-cache show dpkg-repack
Package: dpkg-repack
Priority
Alexander Schmehl [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
* Jacob Friis Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040803 18:33]:
How can I get a list of all installed packages from the Testing release
of Debian?
dpkg --get-selections
If you want a list of removed packages, too, add a \*.
Yeah, but that doesn't know
apt-show-versions | grep testing
hope this help
Marco
Brian Nelson wrote:
Alexander Schmehl [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
* Jacob Friis Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040803 18:33]:
How can I get a list of all installed packages from the Testing release
of Debian?
dpkg --get-selections
If you want
Hello.
How can I get a list of all installed packages from the Testing release
of Debian?
Thanks,
Jacob
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
* Jacob Friis Larsen [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040803 18:33]:
How can I get a list of all installed packages from the Testing release
of Debian?
dpkg --get-selections
If you want a list of removed packages, too, add a \*.
Yours sincerely,
Alexander
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
On 2004-04-06 18:02:35 -0500, dircha wrote:
Vincent Lefevre wrote:
to stay with 4.2 (I don't know if there is a better solution).
But apt-get dist-upgrade -s says:
[...]
Remv x-window-system-core (4.3.0-7 Debian:testing)
[...]
whereas only 4.2.1-12.1 is currently installed. Is it a bug
Vincent Lefevre wrote:
I'm currently using XFree86 4.2 and I don't want to upgrade the X server
and X applications for the moment, because of bugs. I've added the
following to my /etc/apt/preferences file:
Package: xfree86-common
Pin: version 4.2.*
Pin-Priority: 950
Package: xserver-common
Pin:
Vincent Lefevre wrote:
to stay with 4.2 (I don't know if there is a better solution).
But apt-get dist-upgrade -s says:
[...]
Remv x-window-system-core (4.3.0-7 Debian:testing)
[...]
whereas only 4.2.1-12.1 is currently installed. Is it a bug in
apt-get or what...?
Perhaps the problem is arising
hugo vanwoerkom wrote:
Vincent Lefevre wrote:
snip
I don't understand it either. I have as only entry in preferences:
Package: *
Pin: origin schuldei.org
Pin-Priority: 999
My X packages come from there:
deb /http://www.schuldei.org/debian/bruby/ ./
Yet, here too, apt-get dist-upgrade -s gets:
Hello,
Is there a way to find out from which ftp/http source the package was
installed (assuming it was installed via `apt-get ...`)? Or to get the
list of packages installed from the given source?
Thanks,
Sarunas
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe.
Hello
Sarunas Burdulis ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Is there a way to find out from which ftp/http source the package was
installed (assuming it was installed via `apt-get ...`)?
apt-cache policy package
can help you (as long you don't have different sources which provide
packages with exactly
A great feature of aptitude is that it tracks automatically installed
packages, removing these when no package I have explicitly installed
depends on them. But where does it record this info?
I want to be able to see what I have explicitly installed ('manually
installed') on my system, since
Simon Guest wrote:
A great feature of aptitude is that it tracks automatically installed
packages, removing these when no package I have explicitly installed
depends on them. But where does it record this info?
I want to be able to see what I have explicitly installed ('manually
installed
hi there,
there are many ways to list all the packages a system has installed, but
unfortunately i cannot find how to get a list the way i want.
i would like to get a listing of all the packages i have installed, with
the branch tag beside it.
dpkg -l
seems to come closest, but lists the
On 08 Feb 2004, Sam Halliday [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i would like to get a listing of all the packages i have installed, with
the branch tag beside it.
apt-show-versions should do the trick
--
Philipp Weis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Freiburg, Germany http://pweis.com/
--
To
Nick Hastings wrote:
* Dave Carrigan [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040130 00:46]:
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 07:58:36PM +0900, Nick Hastings wrote:
No I don't think so, note the -w flag. It will only match if the
package name _is_ install.
That is correct, the -w flag makes it catch the entire word
Michael D Schleif wrote:
dpkg -l | grep ^i
hth
That's what I used to use, but you'd have to specify something like
COLUMNS='150' dpkg -l |grep ^i
Otherwise, you'll have names like this returned:
ii xtightvncviewe 1.2.7-3Virtual network computing client
software fo
Notice how
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040129 15:24]:
Jamin W. Collins wrote:
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 12:27:11AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
Perhaps dpkg --get-selections would be a good starting point?
I'd
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 07:58:36PM +0900, Nick Hastings wrote:
Careful, dpkg --get-selections doesn't always list only installed
packages
Try:
dpkg --get-selections | grep -w install | cut -f1
To be pedantic, this will fail if a package has the string install in
its name and is in a non
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004:01:29:00:27:11-0500] scribed:
Hi all,
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
(I even remember using it way back when...), but I can't seem to find it.
I've looked at the various apt utility man pages and have
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
(I even remember using it way back when...), but I can't seem to find it.
I've looked at the various apt utility man pages and have not found
anything, even for apt-cache. I'm trying
On 2004-01-29, Pedro M. penned:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed
packages (I even remember using it way back when...), but I can't
seem to find it. I've looked at the various apt utility man pages
and have not found anything
Thanks, for all the replies, they've been very helpfull.
At this point I should probably clarify what I'd like to do, since
thinking about it has brought about some changes. Dpkg keeps a record
of a few things- mainly package lists, their current state, and their
selected state.
This is all
time to weed through.
You probably already know this, but if you use aptitude to install
something with a bunch of dependencies, it will mark the sucked-in
packages for uninstall when nothing depends on them any longer.
Granted, if you have installed packages through other means, this
doesn't help
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 02:21:38PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The origional idea for this was for instances of having installed
something to try it out, then removing it. If a bunch of dependencies
were pulled in, I don't remember what they are. Over time this leads to
lots of
* Dave Carrigan [EMAIL PROTECTED] [040130 00:46]:
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 07:58:36PM +0900, Nick Hastings wrote:
Careful, dpkg --get-selections doesn't always list only installed
packages
Try:
dpkg --get-selections | grep -w install | cut -f1
To be pedantic, this will fail
Hi all,
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
(I even remember using it way back when...), but I can't seem to find it.
I've looked at the various apt utility man pages and have not found
anything, even for apt-cache. I'm trying to write a script to run
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 12:27:11AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
Perhaps dpkg --get-selections would be a good starting point?
--
Jamin W. Collins
Linux is not The Answer. Yes is the answer. Linux is The Question
Jamin W. Collins wrote:
On Thu, Jan 29, 2004 at 12:27:11AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I know that somewhere there is a command to list all installed packages
Perhaps dpkg --get-selections would be a good starting point?
Doh!
I completely forgot about dpkg, I'm so used to apt
I'm trying to come up with a reliable process for replicating the set
of installed packages from one Debian installation to another. I have
two use-cases:
1. Restoring a system from backup.
2. Maintaining a secondary server.
I currently use a combination of dpkg --get-selections and
apt-show
Evan Simpson said:
I'm trying to come up with a reliable process for replicating the set
of installed packages from one Debian installation to another. I have
two use-cases:
1. Restoring a system from backup.
2. Maintaining a secondary server.
Just use systemimager for a complete network
for
installed packages, package deinstall for packages marked 'c' in
aptitude (which I have purged now). Packages marked 'A' in aptitude
simply seem to not be in the list (they should get fetched
automatically anyway).
dpkg --set-selections filename
It is not quite clear to me from the man-page
It is not quite clear to me from the man-page what would happen to
already installed packages. I suppose that set-selections only
affects those packages that are actually in the list.
Yes, I believe it only changes the packages listed in the
file. All others are unaffected.
--
Paul Yeatman
On Tue, 2003-10-14 at 19:48, Jens Grivolla wrote:
Hi,
I apparently have a lot of leftovers from old packages that did not
get cleanly uninstalled, and am losing quite a bit of disk space for
that.
I would therefore like to do a fresh install (backing up /home and
/etc), but using my
Hi,
I apparently have a lot of leftovers from old packages that did not
get cleanly uninstalled, and am losing quite a bit of disk space for
that.
I would therefore like to do a fresh install (backing up /home and
/etc), but using my current selection of packages (which I just
carefully
On Wed, Oct 15, 2003 at 01:48:06AM +0200, Jens Grivolla wrote:
Hi,
I apparently have a lot of leftovers from old packages that did not
get cleanly uninstalled, and am losing quite a bit of disk space for
that.
I would therefore like to do a fresh install (backing up /home and
/etc), but
Is there a way to dump my current selection to a file and read it back
later? I didn't find such an option in aptitude or any of the other
tools.
I use this:
grep -E ^Package|Status:.+$ /var/lib/dpkg/status | \
sed s/Package:/\tPackage:/ | tr \\n \\t | sed s/\t\t/\n/g | \
grep
On Tue, Oct 14, 2003 at 07:18:04PM -0700, Paul Yeatman wrote:
[snip]
run
dpkg --set-selections filename
to get it back.
I did a test:
#echo par install | dpkg --set-selections
#aptitude
hit the G char
it shows: par, to be installed
select par, hit - key, quit aptitude
#echo
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2003/debian-user-200308/msg00929.html
Matt
--
-Original Message-
From: Jens Grivolla [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 15 October 2003 10:37 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: apt: exporting and importing list of installed packages
Hello everybody,
I'd like to have a view of the installed packages - in
some kind of dependency tree. I know I can use dpkg -l
but it only lists the packages alphabetically :-/
I'm just asking out of curiosity - I'd like to be able
to have an overview :-)
Thanks for your help,
Joris
Is there a command to verify the integrity of installed packages ? I
want something similar to the rpm --verify command (it verifies the
size, MD5 sum, permissions, type, owner and group of each file), but
couldn't find ti in the docs (and what tool to use ? dpkg, dselect,
apt-get ?).
Thanks
- Original Message -
From: Xavier Bestel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2002 7:25 PM
Subject: how to verify installed packages ?
Is there a command to verify the integrity of installed packages ? I
want something similar to the rpm --verify
On Thu, Sep 26, 2002 at 02:01:59AM -0500, Stuart Johnston wrote:
I recently installed several packages along with their dependencies. I
have since decided that I didn't really want those packages after all
but I can't remember the names of all the installed dependencies.
Is there any way
I recently installed several packages along with their dependencies. I
have since decided that I didn't really want those packages after all
but I can't remember the names of all the installed dependencies.
Is there any way to get a list of packages installed within a certain
time frame
On 0, Stuart Johnston [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I recently installed several packages along with their dependencies. I
have since decided that I didn't really want those packages after all
but I can't remember the names of all the installed dependencies.
Is there any way to get a list of
Hi,
I dont know how I did it, but I now have 730 packages selected for install,
short of going through one by one and de-selecting them, does anyone know how
to do this another easier way?
I did manage to find one post in the archives which was similiar though not
the same problem. He
On Sunday 21 April 2002 6:01 pm, you wrote:
Hi,
I dont know how I did it, but I now have 730 packages selected for install,
short of going through one by one and de-selecting them, does anyone know
how to do this another easier way?
I did manage to find one post in the archives which was
After the recent conversation regarding this, and since I'm a Debian-
newbie, and want to keep a history of ~when I installed packages,
I created this little bash script that I run each time I install
or remove packages:
x=`date +%y%m%d.%H%M`
COLUMNS=120 dpkg -l ~/dpkg.installed.$x
ln -sf
Hi,
I want to query my system to find out which installed packages came
from stable, testing, and unstable branches. Or perhaps more
appropriately, which branch of the repository do the installed
packages reside in now (regardless of which branch they were in when
they were installed
On Wed, Nov 14, 2001 at 09:38:46AM -0800, Patrick Eaton wrote:
I want to query my system to find out which installed packages came
from stable, testing, and unstable branches. Or perhaps more
appropriately, which branch of the repository do the installed
packages reside in now (regardless
I was looking at what packages I've installed over time, along with ones
installed by default, and am going to some cleaning. In doing so, I ran
across a couple that I want to ask about...
They are:
perl
perl-5.005
perl-5.005-base
perl-5.6
perl-5.6-base
perl-base
and
tcl8.0
tcl8.2
Hall Stevenson wrote:
perl
perl-5.005
perl-5.005-base
perl-5.6
perl-5.6-base
perl-base
Why, for example, are there two versions of perl ?? Isn't perl-5.6
backwards-compatible with perl-5.0x ?? I do see that the perl-5.6
package can be removed and will leave me with 'perl'.
It's
Hi!
I have a question:
Is it possible to list the installed packages (e.g. in the format used in
dselect ( *** Req base tar 1.13.17-2 1.13.17-2 GNU tar )).
I often have the problem that I know that I have a tool for a problem, but I
cannot remember its name. And always
dpkg -L
Cheers
On Fri, Jun 29, 2001 at 10:39:38AM +0200, Debian User wrote:
Hi!
I have a question:
Is it possible to list the installed packages (e.g. in the format used in
dselect ( *** Req base tar 1.13.17-2 1.13.17-2 GNU tar )).
I often have the problem that I
Make that dpkg -l, dpkg -L package-name lists the files contained
within. Sorry about that :)
David
On Fri, Jun 29, 2001 at 03:43:32AM -0500, David Orman wrote:
dpkg -L
Cheers
Debian User [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
DU Is it possible to list the installed packages (e.g. in the format used in
dselect ( *** Req base tar 1.13.17-2 1.13.17-2 GNU tar )).
DU
DU I often have the problem that I know that I have a tool for a
DU problem, but I cannot remember its
Found the answer over at http://www.debianhelp.org
I did all this as root.
Clean out the package cache. Since I had suffered a filesystem corruption I
couldn't trust the files in /var/cache/apt/archives to be ok.
apt-get clean
Find installed packages
dpkg --get-selections | grep -v
services
want come up. I know for sure that some symlinks disappeared and I suspect
that some files are gone or corrupt.
Is there an dpkg or apt trick to go through all installed packages, check
their integrity and reinstall any files that need it?
--
oivvio polite
cell +46 (0)709 30 40 30 / phone
Hi all,
I just realized that many packages which I've installed cannot be removed
because according to dpkg -s and apt-get, they aren't installed (eg gpm), when
they really are installed.
What do I do?
Thanks.
--
Eric Boo
Sunday, May 27, 2001, 12:27 PM
13 hours and 3 minutes
On Sun, May 27, 2001 at 12:29:05PM +0800, Eric Boo wrote:
I just realized that many packages which I've installed cannot be
removed because according to dpkg -s and apt-get, they aren't
installed (eg gpm), when they really are installed.
What do I do?
Assuming you did install 'em via
Verily, on 27 May 2001 12:36AM (-0400), Carl Fink thusly proclaimed:
- Assuming you did install 'em via dpkg/apt, you might try reinstalling
- them (which would replace your existing binaries and conf files with
- the ones from the package), then uninstalling.
Yep, I did install them via
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 21:16, John Carline wrote:
Ahh! I see. You're probably right, but that's caused by the dpkg command
isn't it - not the pipe? Didn't 'dpkg - l' by itself produce what was
wanted?
If the full version is what's needed, it's listed in /var/lib/dpkg/status.
The
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 21:16, John Carline wrote:
Ahh! I see. You're probably right, but that's caused by the dpkg
command isn't it - not the pipe? Didn't 'dpkg - l' by itself
produce what was wanted?
If the full version is what's needed, it's
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
and getting this output:
snip
ii ksirc 2.0-final-0.po IRC Client based on QT and KDE
ii ksirtet2.0-final-0.po Tetris and Puyo-Puyo games for KDE
snip
What I'm trying to get is the full version information. I only
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
It seems that 'dpkg -l' (without the pattern) lists all installed
packages, so you don't need to filter the installed packages out. But,
this isn't important...
and getting this output:
snip
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 11:43, Moritz Schulte wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
snip
What I'm trying to get is the full version information. I only care
about that and the package name.
You can do it with
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
and getting this output:
snip
ii ksirc 2.0-final-0.po IRC Client based on QT and KDE
ii ksirtet2.0-final-0.po Tetris and Puyo-Puyo games for KDE
snip
What I'm trying to get is
Quoting Robert Guthrie ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 11:43, Moritz Schulte wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
snip
What I'm trying to get is the full version information. I only care
Moritz Schulte [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
It seems that 'dpkg -l' (without the pattern) lists all installed
packages, so you don't need to filter the installed packages out.
That's not strictly
Robert Guthrie wrote:
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 11:43, Moritz Schulte wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm using this command:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
snip
What I'm trying to get is the full version information. I only care
about that and the
John Carline [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Guthrie wrote:
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 11:43, Moritz Schulte wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
You can do it with awk: dpkg -l | awk '{ print $2 $3 }'
That didn't work either. It
On Thu, Nov 16, 2000 at 12:23:07AM +, Colin Watson wrote:
He means that he sees the following:
ii ksirc 2.0-final-0.po IRC Client based on QT and KDE
ii ksirtet2.0-final-0.po Tetris and Puyo-Puyo games for KDE
... instead of versions 2.0-final-0.potato.3 and
Colin Watson wrote:
John Carline [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Robert Guthrie wrote:
On Wednesday 15 November 2000 11:43, Moritz Schulte wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
You can do it with awk: dpkg -l | awk '{ print $2 $3 }'
On Thu, Nov 16, 2000 at 03:16:47AM +, John Carline wrote:
Robert Guthrie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
dpkg -l * | egrep ^ii | grep -i kde
I'd like to point out here also, that when I tried to uninstall a package,
but it failed due to a dependency problem, the first i changed even
-installed packages. I can't tinker with it myself
since she is annoyingly located hundreds of miles away from me.
What is the official correct way to deal with lots of half-installed
packages?
Also, while I'm asking, if you install a task, what's the quickest and
easiest way to just get rid
hours to select them all by hand, so I'm looking for
some way to export the list of installed packages on the old server
to a file, and tell apt or dselect on the new server to install those
packages.
Thanks for any suggestions!
--
Craig McPherson
Network Admin
Baptist Student Union
Fayetteville
the packages that the old server currently has installed.
It would take hours to select them all by hand, so I'm looking for
some way to export the list of installed packages on the old server
to a file, and tell apt or dselect on the new server to install those
packages.
Thanks for any
I was walking my gf through an install of Debian (it didn't scare her,
and she's no techie), and everything went fine until she tried
installing some stuff.
Installing task-x-window-system basically choked, and now she is left
with a bunch of half-installed packages. I can't tinker
At 11:33 PM 05/19/2000 -0600, Dave Thayer wrote:
Any way to convince apt to just get the add-on tool?
Greg
--
...
YOW! I bet you rolled your own apache rather than installing one from a
deb package and this is apt's way of telling you that it wants something
that
On Sat, May 20, 2000 at 10:26:10AM -0500, Gregory Guthrie wrote:
equiv is helpful!
^ --- this should be equivs
Is it best that Debian packages are parallel to all of these various
outside universes? Or is there a way that a Debian package can just grab
the lastest from SUn, and then
On Wed, Mar 22, 2000 at 02:14:38AM +, Jim Breton wrote:
I'm sure this has come up before but searching the archives for dpkg
md5sum etc. just comes up with WAY too many matches. :(
Anyway my question is: is there a dpkg command I can run that will check
the md5sums of all my
Is it possible to change the package list so that only
the packages who are currently installed on the system
are left in their state? If so how can I do that?
many thanks,
S. Massy
note: please reply directly as I'm not a member of the list.
__
Do
Hi, This is my first time using this mailing list, and I'm also still
pretty new to linux. I was just wondering if there was a way I could find
out every package (all the thing's I've used apt-get to install...not the
base packages) installed on my computer. I'm running slink on a
486/33 with
don't think you can filter and show what packages were installed via what
method, the 'base' system is only 1 package though.
use dpkg -l to list all installed packages
nate
On Tue, 21 Dec 1999, Rob Hensley wrote:
zoid Hi, This is my first time using this mailing list, and I'm also still
zoid
You can see all the installed packages using 'dselect'. Call it from the
shell and then select 'Select'. The installed packages are marked with an
'*'.
TroPeek
- Original Message -
From: Rob Hensley [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Tuesday, December 21, 1999 9:04
Hi, This is my first time using this mailing list, and I'm also still
pretty new to linux. I was just wondering if there was a way I could find
out every package (all the thing's I've used apt-get to install...not the
base packages) installed on my computer. I'm running slink on a
486/33 with
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rob Hensley) wrote:
Hi, This is my first time using this mailing list, and I'm also still
pretty new to linux. I was just wondering if there was a way I could find
out every package (all the thing's I've used apt-get to install...not the
base packages) installed on my computer.
Hello,
I have some trouble with dpkg because I need
a listing with ALL installed Packages.
What are the parameters to do that ???
I know only:
$ dpkg -s packet-name
$ dpkg -L packet-name
Thanks for your Help
Michelle
dpkg -l| more
_oO Kecsi 0o_
Michelle Konzack wrote:
Hello,
I have some trouble with dpkg because I need
a listing with ALL installed Packages.
What are the parameters to do that ???
I know only:
$ dpkg -s packet-name
$ dpkg -L packet-name
Hi,
dpkg -l | grep ^.i pkgs-installed
This will give you a text
Thanks,
but now a new question:
MKHi,
MK
MK dpkg -l | grep ^.i pkgs-installed
^^
What is this with 'grep' ???
Thanks and have a nice day
Michelle
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