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1<!doctype debiandoc system>
2<!-- -*- mode: sgml; mode: fold -*- -->
3<book>
4<title>APT User's Guide</title>
5
6<author>Jason Gunthorpe <email>jgg@debian.org</email></author>
7<version>$Id: guide.sgml,v 1.1 1998/07/02 02:58:12 jgg Exp $</version>
8
9<abstract>
10This document provides an overview of how to use the the APT package manager.
11</abstract>
12
13<copyright>
14Copyright &copy; Jason Gunthorpe, 1998.
15<p>
16"APT" and this document are free software; you can redistribute them and/or
17modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
18by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
19option) any later version.
20
21<p>
22For more details, on Debian GNU/Linux systems, see the file
23/usr/doc/copyright/GPL for the full license.
24</copyright>
25
26<toc sect>
27
28<!-- General {{{ -->
29<!-- ===================================================================== -->
30<chapt>General
31
32<p>
33The APT package currently contains two sections, the APT <prgn>dselect</>
34method and the <prgn>apt-get</> command line user interface. Both provide
35a way to install and remove packages as well as download new packages from
36the Internet.
37
38<sect>Anatomy of the Package System
39<p>
40The Debian packaging system has a large amount of information associated with
41each package to help assure that it integrates cleanly and easily into
42the system. The most prominent of features is the dependency system.
43
44<p>
45The dependency system allows individual programs to make use of shared
46elements in the system such as libraries. It simplifies placing infrequently
47used portions of a program in separate packages to reduce the
48number of things the average user is required to install. Also, it allows
49a choices in for such things as mail transport agents, X servers and
50so on.
51
52<p>
53The first step to understanding the dependency system is to grasp the concept
54of a simple dependency. The meaning of a simple dependency is that a package
55requires another package to be installed at the same time to work properly.
56
57<p>
58For instance, mail-crypt is an emacs extension that aids in encrypting email
59with PGP. Without PGP installed mail-crypt is useless, so mail-crypt has a
60simple dependency on PGP. Also, because it is an emacs extension it has a
61simple dependency on emacs, without emacs it is completely useless.
62
63<p>
64The other important dependency to understand is a conflicting dependency. It
65means that a package, when installed with another package, will not work and
66may possibly be extremely harmful to the system. As an example consider a
67mail transport agent such as sendmail, exim or qmail. It is not possible
68to have two mail transport agents installed because both need to listen to
69the network to receive mail. Attempting to install two will seriously
70damage the system so all mail transport agents have a conflicting dependency
71with all other mail transport agents.
72
73<p>
74As an added complication there is the possibility for a package to pretend
75to be another package. Consider that exim and sendmail for many intents are
76identical, they both deliver mail and understand a common interface. Hence,
77the package system has a way for them to declare that they are both
78mail-transport-agents. So, exim and sendmail both declare that they provide a
79mail-transport-agent and other packages that need a mail transport agent
80depend on mail-transport-agent. This can add a great deal of confusion when
81trying to manually fix packages.
82
83<p>
84At any given time a single dependency may be met by packages that are already
85installed or it may not be. APT attempts to help resolve dependency issues
86by providing a number of automatic algorithms that help in selecting packages
87for installation.
88</sect>
89
90</chapt>
91 <!-- }}} -->
92<!-- apt-get {{{ -->
93<!-- ===================================================================== -->
94<chapt>apt-get
95
96<p>
97<prgn>apt-get</> provides a simple way to install packages from the command
98line. Unlike <prgn>dpkg</>, <prgn>apt-get</> does not understand .deb files,
99it works with the packages proper name and can only install .deb archives from
100a <em>Source</>.
101
102<p>
103The first <footnote>If you are using an http proxy server you must set the
104http_proxy environment variable first, see sources.list(5)</footnote> thing that
105should be done before using <prgn>apt-get</> is to fetch the package lists
106from the <em>Sources</> so that it knows what packages are
107available. This is done with <tt>apt-get update</>. For instance,
108
109<p>
110<example>
111# apt-get update
112Get http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian-non-US/ stable/binary-i386/ Packages
113Get http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian/ frozen/contrib Packages
114Updating package file cache...done
115Updating package status cache...done
116Checking system integrity...ok
117</example>
118
119<p>
120Once updated there are several useful commands that can be used,
121<taglist>
122<tag>upgrade<item>
123Upgrade will attempt to gently upgrade the whole system. Upgrade will
124never install a new package or remove an existing package, nor will it
125ever upgrade a package that might cause some other package to break.
126This can be used daily to relatively safely upgrade the system. Upgrade
127will list all of the packages that it could not upgrade, this usually
128means that they depend on new packages or conflict with some other package.
129<prgn>Dselect</> or <tt>apt-get install</> can be used to force these
130packages to install.
131
132<tag>install<item>
133Install is used to install single packages by name. The package is
134automatically fetched and installed. This can be useful if you already
135know the name of the package to install and do not want to go into a GUI
136to select it. Any number of packages may be passed to install, they will
137all be fetched. Install automatically attempts to resolve dependency problems
138with the listed packages and will print a summary and ask for confirmation
139if anything other than it's arguments are changed
140
141<tag>dist-upgrade<item>
142Dist-upgrade is a complete upgrader designed to make simple upgrading between
143releases of Debian. It uses a sophisticated algorithm to determine the best
144set of packages to install, upgrade and remove to get as much of the system
145to the newest release. In some situations it may be desired to use dist-upgrade
146rather than spend the time manually resolving dependencies in <prgn>dselect</>.
147Once dist-upgrade has completed then <prgn>dselect</> can be used to install
148any packages that may have been left out.
149
150<p>
151It is important to closely look at what dist-upgrade is going to do, its
152decisions may sometimes be quite surprising.
153</taglist>
154
155<p>
156<prgn>apt-get</> has several command line options that are detailed in it's
157man page, <manref name="apt-get" section="8">. The most useful option is
158<tt>-d</> which does not install the fetched files. If the system has to
159download a large number of package it would be undesired to start installing
160them in case something goes wrong. When <tt>-d</> is used the downloaded
161archives can be installed by simply running the command that caused them to
162be downloaded again without <tt>-d</>.
163
164</chapt>
165 <!-- }}} -->
166<!-- DSelect {{{ -->
167<!-- ===================================================================== -->
168<chapt>DSelect
169<p>
170The APT <prgn>dselect</> method provides the complete APT system with
171the <prgn>dselect</> package selection GUI. <prgn>dselect</> is used to
172select the packages to be installed or removed and APT actually installs them.
173
174<p>
175To enable the APT method you need to to select [A]ccess in <prgn>dselect</>
176and then choose the APT method. You will be prompted for a set of
177<em>Sources</> which are places to fetch archives from. These can be remote
178Internet sites, local Debian mirrors or CDROMs. Each source can provide
179a fragment of the total Debian archive, APT will automatically combine them
180to form a complete set of packages. If you have a CDROM then it is a good idea
181to specify it first and then specify a mirror so that you have access to
182the latest bug fixes. APT will automatically use packages on your CDROM before
183downloading from the Internet.
184
185<p>
186<example>
187 Set up a list of distribution source locations
188
189 Please give the base URL of the debian distribution.
190 The access schemes I know about are: http file
191
192 For example:
193 file:/mnt/debian,
194 ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian,
195 http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian,
196
197
198 URL [http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian]:
199</example>
200
201<p>
202The <em>Sources</> setup starts by asking for the base of the Debian
203archive, defaulting to a HTTP mirror. Next it asks for the distribution to
204get.
205
206<p>
207<example>
208 Please give the distribution tag to get or a path to the
209 package file ending in a /. The distribution
210 tags are typically something like: stable unstable frozen non-US
211
212 Distribution [stable]:
213</example>
214
215<p>
216The distribution refers to the Debian version in the archive, <em>stable</>
217refers to the latest released version and <em>unstable</> refers to the
218developmental version. <em>non-US</> is only available on some mirrors and
219refers to packages that contain encryption technology or other things that
220cannot be exported from the United States. Importing these packages into the
221US is legal however.
222<footnote>As of this writing the non-US distribution has
223not been created, the only way to access it is by specifying
224stable/binary-i386/ at this prompt and by specifying a URL ending in
225debian-non-US </footnote>
226
227<p>
228<example>
229 Please give the components to get
230 The components are typically something like: main contrib non-free
231
232 Components [main contrib non-free]:
233</example>
234
235<p>
236The components list refers to the list of sub distributions to fetch. The
237distribution is split up based on software copyright, main being DFSG free
238packages while contrib and non-free contain things that have various
239restrictions placed on their use and distribution.
240
241<p>
242Any number of sources can be added, the setup script will continue to
243prompt until you have specified all that you want.
244
245<p>
246Before starting to use <prgn>dselect</> it is necessary to update the
247available list by selecting [U]pdate from the menu. This is a super-set of
248<tt>apt-get update</> that makes the fetched information available to
249<prgn>dselect</>. [U]pdate must be performed even if <tt>apt-get update</>
250has been run before.
251
252<p>
253You can then go on and make your selections using [S]elect and then
254perform the installation using [I]nstall. When using the APT method
255the [C]onfig and [R]emove commands have no meaning, the [I]nstall command
256performs both of them together.
257
258</chapt>
259 <!-- }}} -->
260<!-- The Interfaces {{{ -->
261<!-- ===================================================================== -->
262<chapt>The Interface
263
264<p>
265Both that APT <prgn>dselect</> method and <prgn>apt-get</> share the same
266interface. It is a simple system that generally tells you what it will do
267and then goes and does it.
268<footnote>
269The <prgn>dselect</> method actually is a set of wrapper scripts
270to <prgn>apt-get</>. The method actually provides more functionality than
271is present in <prgn>apt-get</> alone.
272</footnote>
273After printing out a summary of what will happen APT then will print out some
274informative status messages so that you can estimate how far along it is and
275how much is left to do.
276
277<!-- ===================================================================== -->
278<sect>The Pre-Checks
279
280<p>
281Before all operations, except update, APT performs a number of checks on the
282systems. These are designed to safe guard the operations it is about to
283undertake. At any time the full set of checks may be run by performing
284<tt>apt-get check</>.
285<p>
286<example>
287# apt-get check
288Updating package file cache...done
289Updating package status cache...done
290Checking system integrity...ok
291</example>
292
293<p>
294The first check is to ensure that the archive package lists are matched to
295the pre-generated data cache, if they are not then the cache is automatically
296refreshed. This may fail if <tt>apt-get update</> has not been run to
297synchronize with the <em>Sources</>. The next check verifies that the state of
298the system matches the cached state and automatically rebuilds the cached
299state if they are not synchronized. This check should never fail and it
300indicates a serious error if it ever does.
301
302<p>
303The final check performs a detailed analysis of the system integrity. It
304checks every dependency of every installed or unpacked package and considers
305if it is ok. Should this find a problem then a report will be printed out and
306<prgn>apt-get</> will refuse to run.
307
308<p>
309<example>
310# apt-get check
311Updating package file cache...done
312Updating package status cache...done
313Checking system integrity...dependency error
314You might want to run apt-get -f install' to correct these.
315Sorry, but the following packages are broken - this means they have unmet
316dependencies:
317 libdbd-mysql-perl: Depends:perl
318 xzx: Depends:xlib6
319 libdbd-msql-perl: Depends:perl
320 mailpgp: Depends:pgp-i Depends:pgp-us
321 xdpkg: Depends:python
322 squake: Depends:quake-lib Depends:quake-lib-stub
323 debmake: Depends:fileutils
324 libreadlineg2: Conflicts:libreadline2
325 ssh: Depends:gmp2 Depends:xlib6g Depends:zlib1g
326</example>
327
328<p>
329In this example the system has many problems, including a serious problem
330with libreadlineg2. For each package that has unmet dependencies a line
331is printed out indicating the package with the problem and the dependencies
332that are unmet. For brevity the version inter-relationships are omitted.
333
334<p>
335There are two ways a system can get into a broken state like this. The
336first is caused by <prgn>dpkg missing</> some subtle relationships between
337packages when performing upgrades. <footnote>APT however considers all known
338dependencies and attempts to prevent broken packages</footnote>. The second is
339if a package installation fails during an operation. In this situation a
340package may have been unpacked without its dependents being installed.
341
342<p>
343The second situation is much less serious than the first because APT places
344certain assurances on the order that packages are installed. In both cases
345supplying the <tt>-f</> option to <prgn>atp-get</> will cause APT to deduce a
346possible solution to the problem and then continue on. The APT <prgn>dselect</>
347method always supplies the <tt>-f</> option to allow for easy continuation
348of failed maintainer scripts.
349
350<p>
351However, if the <tt>-f</> option is used to correct a seriously broken system
352caused by the first case then it is possible that it will either fail
353immediately or the installation sequence will fail. In either case it is
354necessary to manually use dpkg (possibly with forcing options) to correct
355the situation enough to allow APT to proceed.
356</sect>
357
358<!-- ===================================================================== -->
359<sect>The Status Report
360
361<p>
362Before proceeding <prgn>apt-get</> will present a report on what will happen.
363Generally the report reflects the type of operation being performed but there
364are several common elements. In all cases the lists reflect the final state
365of things, taking into account the <tt>-f</> option and any other relevant
366activities to the command being executed.
367
368<sect1>The Extra Package list
369<p>
370<example>
371The following extra packages will be installed:
372 libdbd-mysql-perl xlib6 zlib1 xzx libreadline2 libdbd-msql-perl
373 mailpgp xdpkg fileutils pinepgp zlib1g xlib6g perl-base
374 bin86 libgdbm1 libgdbmg1 quake-lib gmp2 bcc xbuffy
375 squake pgp-i python-base debmake ldso perl libreadlineg2
376 ssh
377</example>
378
379<p>
380The Extra Package list shows all of the packages that will be installed
381or upgraded in excess of the ones mentioned on the command line. It is
382only generated for an <tt>install</> command. The listed packages are
383often the result of an Auto Install.
384</sect1>
385
386<sect1>The Packages to Remove
387<p>
388<example>
389The following packages will be REMOVED:
390 xlib6-dev xpat2 tk40-dev xkeycaps xbattle xonix
391 xdaliclock tk40 tk41 xforms0.86 ghostview xloadimage xcolorsel
392 xadmin xboard perl-debug tkined xtetris libreadline2-dev perl-suid
393 nas xpilot xfig
394</example>
395
396<p>
397The Packages to Remove list shows all of the packages that will be
398removed from the system. It can be shown for any of the operations and
399should be given a careful inspection to ensure nothing important is to
400be taken off. The <tt>-f</> option is especially good at generating packages
401to remove so extreme care should be used in that case. The list may contain
402packages that are going to be removed because they are only
403partially removed, possibly due to an aborted installation.
404</sect1>
405
406<sect1>The New Packages list
407<p>
408<example>
409The following NEW packages will installed:
410 zlib1g xlib6g perl-base libgdbmg1 quake-lib gmp2 pgp-i python-base
411</example>
412
413<p>
414The New Packages list is simply a reminder of what will happen. The packages
415listed are not presently installed in the system but will be when APT is done.
416</sect1>
417
418<sect1>The Kept Back list
419<p>
420<example>
421The following packages have been kept back
422 compface man-db tetex-base msql libpaper svgalib1
423 gs snmp arena lynx xpat2 groff xscreensaver
424</example>
425
426<p>
427Whenever the whole system is being upgraded there is the possibility that
428new versions of packages cannot be installed because they require new things
429or conflict with already installed things. In this case the package will
430appear in the Kept Back list. The best way to convince packages listed
431there to install is with <tt>apt-get install</> or by using <prgn>dselect</>
432to resolve their problems.
433</sect1>
434
435<sect1>Held Packages warning
436<p>
437<example>
438The following held packages will be changed:
439 cvs
440</example>
441
442<p>
443Sometimes you can ask APT to install a package that is on hold, in such a
444case it prints out a warning that the held package is going to be
445changed. This should only happen during dist-upgrade or install.
446</sect1>
447
448<sect1>Final summary
449<p>
450Finally, APT will print out a summary of all the changes that will occur.
451
452<p>
453<example>
454206 packages upgraded, 8 newly installed, 23 to remove and 51 not upgraded.
45512 packages not fully installed or removed.
456Need to get 65.7M/66.7M of archives. After unpacking 26.5M will be used.
457</example>
458
459<p>
460The first line of the summary simply is a reduced version of all of the
461lists and includes the number of upgrades - that is packages already
462installed that have new versions available. The second line indicates the
463number of poorly configured packages, possibly the result of an aborted
464installation. The final line shows the space requirements that the
465installation needs. The first pair of numbers refer to the size of
466the archive files. The first number indicates the number of bytes that
467must be fetched from remote locations and the second indicates the
468total size of all the archives required. The next number indicates the
469size difference between the presently installed packages and the newly
470installed packages. It is roughly equivalent to the space required in
471/usr after everything is done. If a large number of packages are being
472removed then the value may indicate the amount of space that will be
473freed.
474
475</sect>
476
477<!-- ===================================================================== -->
478<sect>The Status Display
479<p>
480During the download of archives and package files APT prints out a series of
481status messages,
482
483<p>
484<example>
485# apt-get update
486Get http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian-non-US/ stable/binary-i386/ Packages
487Get http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian/ frozen/contrib Packages
488Get http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian/ frozen/main Packages
489Get http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian-non-US/ unstable/binary-i386/ Packages
490Get http://llug.sep.bnl.gov/debian/ frozen/non-free Packages
49111% [Packages `Waiting for file' 0/32.1k 0%] 2203b/s 1m52s
492</example>
493
494<p>
495The lines starting with <em>Get</> are printed out when APT begins to fetch
496a file while the last line indicates the progress of the download. The first
497percent value on the progress line indicates the total percent done of all
498files. Unfortunately since the size of the Package files is unknown
499<tt>apt-get update</> estimates the percent done which causes some
500inaccuracies.
501
502<p>
503The next section of the status line is repeated once for each dowload thread
504and indicates the operation being performed and some usefull information
505about what is happening. Sometimes this section will simply read <em>Forking</>
506which means the OS is loading the download module. The first word after the [
507is the short form name of the object being downloaded. For archives it will
508contain the name of the package that is being fetched.
509
510<p>
511Inside of the single quote is an informative string indicating the progress
512of the negotiation phase of the download. Typically it progresses from
513<em>Connecting</> to <em>Waiting for file</> to <em>Downloading</> or
514<em>Resuming</>. The final value is the number of bytes downloaded from the
515remote site. Once the download beings this is represented as <tt>102/10.2k</>
516indicating that 102 bytes have been fetched and 10.2 kilobytes is expected.
517The total size is always shown in 4 figure notation to preserve space. After
518the size display is a percent meter for the file itself.
519The second last element is the instantenous average speed. This values is
520updated every 5 seconds and reflects the rate of data transfer for that
521period. Finally is shown the estimated transfer time. This is updated
522regularly and reflects the time to complete everything at the shown
523transfer rate.
524
525<p>
526The status display updates every half second to provide a constant feedback
527on the download progress while the Get lines scroll back whenever a new
528file is started. Since the status display is constantly updated it is
529unsuitable for logging to a file, use the <tt>-q</> option to remove the
530status display.
531</sect>
532
533<!-- ===================================================================== -->
534<sect>Dpkg
535
536<p>
537APT uses <prgn>dpkg</> for installing the archives and will switch
538over to the <prgn>dpkg</> interface once downloading is completed.
539<prgn>dpkg</> will also as a number of questions as it processes the packages
540and the packages themselves may also ask several questions. Before each
541question there is usually a description of what it is asking and the
542questions are too varied to discuss completely here.
543</sect>
544
545</chapt>
546 <!-- }}} -->
547
548</book>