Am 2007-11-06 03:26:59, schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the dpkg
documentation, I cannot find the options that tell me a list of all
packages that are installed on my system and the time/date on which
they were installed and/or updated.
dpkg -l | grep ii
will do the job
Cheers,
Ivan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the dpkg
documentation, I cannot find the options that tell me a list of all
packages that are installed on my system and the time/date on which
they
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On 11/06/07 03:27, Ivan Glushkov wrote:
dpkg -l | grep ii
will do the job
A more effective variant is:
COLUMNS=120 dpkg -l | grep ii
Cheers,
Ivan
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the dpkg
documentation, I cannot find the options that tell me a list of all
packages that are installed on my system and the time/date on which
they were installed and/or updated.
What I am looking for is
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the dpkg
documentation, I cannot find the options that tell me a list of all
packages that are installed on my system and the time/date on which
they were installed and/or updated.
What I am looking for is something similar to rpm -qa, but
On Nov 5, 2007 7:26 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm sure I am overlooking something, but after scouring the dpkg
documentation, I cannot find the options that tell me a list of all
packages that are installed on my system and the time/date on which
they were installed and/or updated.
What
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