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APT User's Guide - Chapter 2
apt-get
apt-get
provides a simple way to install packages from the command
line. Unlike dpkg
, apt-get
does not understand .deb files,
it works with the packages proper name and can only install .deb archives from
a Source.
The first [1] thing that
should be done before using apt-get
is to fetch the package lists
from the Sources so that it knows what packages are
available. This is done with apt-get update. For instance,
# apt-get update
Get http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian-non-US/ stable/binary-i386/ Packages
Get http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian/ frozen/contrib Packages
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
Once updated there are several useful commands that can be used,
- upgrade
- Upgrade will attempt to gently upgrade the whole system. Upgrade will
never install a new package or remove an existing package, nor will it
ever upgrade a package that might cause some other package to break.
This can be used daily to relatively safely upgrade the system. Upgrade
will list all of the packages that it could not upgrade, this usually
means that they depend on new packages or conflict with some other package.
Dselect
or apt-get install can be used to force these
packages to install.
- install
- Install is used to install single packages by name. The package is
automatically fetched and installed. This can be useful if you already
know the name of the package to install and do not want to go into a GUI
to select it. Any number of packages may be passed to install, they will
all be fetched. Install automatically attempts to resolve dependency problems
with the listed packages and will print a summary and ask for confirmation
if anything other than it's arguments are changed
- dist-upgrade
- Dist-upgrade is a complete upgrader designed to make simple upgrading between
releases of Debian. It uses a sophisticated algorithm to determine the best
set of packages to install, upgrade and remove to get as much of the system
to the newest release. In some situations it may be desired to use dist-upgrade
rather than spend the time manually resolving dependencies in
dselect
.
Once dist-upgrade has completed then dselect
can be used to install
any packages that may have been left out.
It is important to closely look at what dist-upgrade is going to do, its
decisions may sometimes be quite surprising.
apt-get
has several command line options that are detailed in it's
man page, apt-get(8)
. The most useful option is
-d which does not install the fetched files. If the system has to
download a large number of package it would be undesired to start installing
them in case something goes wrong. When -d is used the downloaded
archives can be installed by simply running the command that caused them to
be downloaded again without -d.
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APT User's Guide
$Id: guide.sgml,v 1.2 1998/11/23 01:15:59 jgg Exp $
Jason Gunthorpe jgg@debian.org