> This is how APT work. If you want to remove the dependencies that were
automatically installed by 'maas;, you need to: `sudo apt-get autoremove
--purge`
Well, I understand your point but you'll admit that it's strange to do this:
`sudo apt-get purge maas`
And after that, to still have MAAS fully
roaksoax@unleashed:~$ sudo apt-get remove --purge maas
[sudo] password for roaksoax:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:
dbconfig-common libecap2 maas-cli m
Hi Raphael,
This is how APT work. If you want to remove the dependencies that were
automatically installed by 'maas;, you need to:
sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
Otherwise, when you purge a package, the dependencies it installed ar
market candidate for removal, but they are not removed automati