Distinction between apt-cache and dpkg -l
I use apt-cache pkgname to retrieve the packages as
me@host:~$ apt-cache pkgnames | wc -l
62803
get 62803 results
but
me@host:~$ dpkg -l | wc -l
2336
What's the reasons which lead such a huge distinction. I presume that dpkg is super than apt.
package-management
add a comment |
I use apt-cache pkgname to retrieve the packages as
me@host:~$ apt-cache pkgnames | wc -l
62803
get 62803 results
but
me@host:~$ dpkg -l | wc -l
2336
What's the reasons which lead such a huge distinction. I presume that dpkg is super than apt.
package-management
add a comment |
I use apt-cache pkgname to retrieve the packages as
me@host:~$ apt-cache pkgnames | wc -l
62803
get 62803 results
but
me@host:~$ dpkg -l | wc -l
2336
What's the reasons which lead such a huge distinction. I presume that dpkg is super than apt.
package-management
I use apt-cache pkgname to retrieve the packages as
me@host:~$ apt-cache pkgnames | wc -l
62803
get 62803 results
but
me@host:~$ dpkg -l | wc -l
2336
What's the reasons which lead such a huge distinction. I presume that dpkg is super than apt.
package-management
package-management
asked 1 hour ago
AliceAlice
450110
450110
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
apt
is for managing remote repositories, dpkg
- for locally installed packages. They're related. apt
is front end to dpkg
. When you run apt-get install package
it gets .deb
file, and installs it via dpkg
. So numbers differ because there's a lot of packages available, but only fraction is installed locally on your system.
apt-cache
can show both installed and non-installed packages, because it queries the apt
cache - listing of what is available in remote repositories ( that cache is what you get when you do apt-get update
). For instance,
$ apt-cache policy terminator
terminator:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.91-1
$ dpkg -l terminator
dpkg-query: no packages found matching terminator
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
apt
is for managing remote repositories, dpkg
- for locally installed packages. They're related. apt
is front end to dpkg
. When you run apt-get install package
it gets .deb
file, and installs it via dpkg
. So numbers differ because there's a lot of packages available, but only fraction is installed locally on your system.
apt-cache
can show both installed and non-installed packages, because it queries the apt
cache - listing of what is available in remote repositories ( that cache is what you get when you do apt-get update
). For instance,
$ apt-cache policy terminator
terminator:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.91-1
$ dpkg -l terminator
dpkg-query: no packages found matching terminator
add a comment |
apt
is for managing remote repositories, dpkg
- for locally installed packages. They're related. apt
is front end to dpkg
. When you run apt-get install package
it gets .deb
file, and installs it via dpkg
. So numbers differ because there's a lot of packages available, but only fraction is installed locally on your system.
apt-cache
can show both installed and non-installed packages, because it queries the apt
cache - listing of what is available in remote repositories ( that cache is what you get when you do apt-get update
). For instance,
$ apt-cache policy terminator
terminator:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.91-1
$ dpkg -l terminator
dpkg-query: no packages found matching terminator
add a comment |
apt
is for managing remote repositories, dpkg
- for locally installed packages. They're related. apt
is front end to dpkg
. When you run apt-get install package
it gets .deb
file, and installs it via dpkg
. So numbers differ because there's a lot of packages available, but only fraction is installed locally on your system.
apt-cache
can show both installed and non-installed packages, because it queries the apt
cache - listing of what is available in remote repositories ( that cache is what you get when you do apt-get update
). For instance,
$ apt-cache policy terminator
terminator:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.91-1
$ dpkg -l terminator
dpkg-query: no packages found matching terminator
apt
is for managing remote repositories, dpkg
- for locally installed packages. They're related. apt
is front end to dpkg
. When you run apt-get install package
it gets .deb
file, and installs it via dpkg
. So numbers differ because there's a lot of packages available, but only fraction is installed locally on your system.
apt-cache
can show both installed and non-installed packages, because it queries the apt
cache - listing of what is available in remote repositories ( that cache is what you get when you do apt-get update
). For instance,
$ apt-cache policy terminator
terminator:
Installed: (none)
Candidate: 1.91-1
$ dpkg -l terminator
dpkg-query: no packages found matching terminator
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
Sergiy KolodyazhnyySergiy Kolodyazhnyy
74k9154323
74k9154323
add a comment |
add a comment |
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