dpkg - package manager for Debian
This manual is intended for users wishing to understand
dpkg's command line options and package states in more detail than
that provided by dpkg --help.
It should not be used by package maintainers wishing to
understand how dpkg will install their packages. The descriptions of
what dpkg does when installing and removing packages are particularly
inadequate.
dpkg is a medium-level tool to install, build, remove and
manage Debian packages. The primary and more user-friendly front-end for
dpkg as a CLI (command-line interface) is apt(8) and as a TUI
(terminal user interface) is aptitude(8). dpkg itself is
controlled entirely via command line parameters, which consist of exactly
one action and zero or more options. The action-parameter tells dpkg
what to do and options control the behavior of the action in some way.
dpkg can also be used as a front-end to dpkg-deb(1)
and dpkg-query(1). The list of supported actions can be found later
on in the ACTIONS section. If any such action is encountered
dpkg just runs dpkg-deb or dpkg-query with the
parameters given to it, but no specific options are currently passed to
them, to use any such option the back-ends need to be called directly.
dpkg maintains some usable information about available
packages. The information is divided in three classes: states,
selection states and flags. These values are intended to be
changed mainly with dselect.
- not-installed
- The package is not installed on your system.
- config-files
- Only the configuration files or the postrm script and the data it
needs to remove of the package exist on the system.
- half-installed
- The installation of the package has been started, but not completed for
some reason.
- unpacked
- The package is unpacked, but not configured.
- half-configured
- The package is unpacked and configuration has been started, but not yet
completed for some reason.
- triggers-awaited
- The package awaits trigger processing by another package.
- triggers-pending
- The package has been triggered.
- installed
- The package is correctly unpacked and configured.
- install
- The package is selected for installation.
- hold
- A package marked to be on hold is kept on the same version, that
is, no automatic new installs, upgrades or removals will be performed on
them, unless these actions are requested explicitly, or are permitted to
be done automatically with the --force-hold option.
- deinstall
- The package is selected for deinstallation (i.e. we want to remove all
files, except configuration files).
- purge
- The package is selected to be purged (i.e. we want to remove everything
from system directories, even configuration files).
- unknown
- The package selection is unknown. A package that is also in a
not-installed state, and with an ok flag will be forgotten
in the next database store.
- ok
- A package marked ok is in a known state, but might need further
processing.
- reinstreq
- A package marked reinstreq is broken and requires reinstallation.
These packages cannot be removed, unless forced with option
--force-remove-reinstreq.
- -i, --install
package-file...
- Install the package. If --recursive or -R option is
specified, package-file must refer to a directory instead.
Installation consists of the following steps:
- 1.
- Extract the control files of the new package.
- 2.
- If another version of the same package was installed before the new
installation, execute prerm script of the old package.
- 3.
- Run preinst script, if provided by the package.
- 4.
- Unpack the new files, and at the same time back up the old files, so that
if something goes wrong, they can be restored.
- 5.
- If another version of the same package was installed before the new
installation, execute the postrm script of the old package. Note
that this script is executed after the preinst script of the new
package, because new files are written at the same time old files are
removed.
- 6.
- Configure the package. See --configure for detailed information
about how this is done.
- --unpack
package-file...
- Unpack the package, but don't configure it. If --recursive or
-R option is specified, package-file must refer to a
directory instead.
Will process triggers for Pre-Depends unless
--no-triggers has been specified.
- --configure
package...|-a|--pending
- Configure a package which has been unpacked but not yet configured. If
-a or --pending is given instead of package, all
unpacked but unconfigured packages are configured.
To reconfigure a package which has already been configured,
try the dpkg-reconfigure(8) command instead (which is part of the
debconf project).
Configuring consists of the following steps:
- 1.
- Unpack the conffiles, and at the same time back up the old conffiles, so
that they can be restored if something goes wrong.
- 2.
- Run postinst script, if provided by the package.
Will process triggers unless --no-triggers has been
specified.
- --triggers-only
package...|-a|--pending
- Processes only triggers (since dpkg 1.14.17). All pending triggers will be
processed. If package names are supplied only those packages' triggers
will be processed, exactly once each where necessary. Use of this option
may leave packages in the improper triggers-awaited and
triggers-pending states. This can be fixed later by running:
dpkg --configure --pending.
- -r, --remove
package...|-a|--pending
- Remove an installed package. This removes everything except conffiles and
other data cleaned up by the postrm script, which may avoid having
to reconfigure the package if it is reinstalled later (conffiles are
configuration files that are listed in the DEBIAN/conffiles control
file). If there is no DEBIAN/conffiles control file nor
DEBIAN/postrm script, this command is equivalent to calling
--purge. If -a or --pending is given instead of a
package name, then all packages unpacked, but marked to be removed in file
/var/lib/dpkg/status, are removed.
Removing of a package consists of the following steps:
- 1.
- Run prerm script.
- 2.
- Remove the installed files.
- 3.
- Run postrm script.
Will process triggers unless --no-triggers has been
specified.
- -P, --purge
package...|-a|--pending
- Purge an installed or already removed package. This removes everything,
including conffiles, and anything else cleaned up from postrm. If
-a or --pending is given instead of a package name, then all
packages unpacked or removed, but marked to be purged in file
/var/lib/dpkg/status, are purged.
Note: Some configuration files might be unknown to
dpkg because they are created and handled separately through the
configuration scripts. In that case, dpkg won't remove them by
itself, but the package's postrm script (which is called by
dpkg), has to take care of their removal during purge. Of course,
this only applies to files in system directories, not configuration
files written to individual users' home directories.
Purging of a package consists of the following steps:
- 1.
- Remove the package, if not already removed. See --remove for
detailed information about how this is done.
- 2.
- Run postrm script.
Will process triggers unless --no-triggers has been
specified.
- -V, --verify
[package-name...]
- Verifies the integrity of package-name or all packages if omitted,
by comparing information from the files installed by a package with the
files metadata information stored in the dpkg database (since dpkg
1.17.2). The origin of the files metadata information in the database is
the binary packages themselves. That metadata gets collected at package
unpack time during the installation process.
Currently the only functional check performed is an md5sum
verification of the file contents against the stored value in the files
database. It will only get checked if the database contains the file
md5sum. To check for any missing metadata in the database, the
--audit command can be used. This is only an integrity check and
should not be considered as any kind of security verification.
The output format is selectable with the
--verify-format option, which by default uses the rpm
format, but that might change in the future, and as such, programs
parsing this command output should be explicit about the format they
expect.
- -C, --audit
[package-name...]
- Performs database sanity and consistency checks for package-name or
all packages if omitted (per package checks since dpkg 1.17.10). For
example, searches for packages that have been installed only partially on
your system or that have missing, wrong or obsolete control data or files.
dpkg will suggest what to do with them to get them fixed.
- --update-avail
[Packages-file]
- --merge-avail
[Packages-file]
- Update dpkg's and dselect's idea of which packages are
available. With action --merge-avail, old information is combined
with information from Packages-file. With action
--update-avail, old information is replaced with the information in
the Packages-file. The Packages-file distributed with Debian
is simply named «Packages». If the
Packages-file argument is missing or named «-»
then it will be read from standard input (since dpkg 1.17.7). dpkg
keeps its record of available packages in /var/lib/dpkg/available.
A simpler one-shot command to retrieve and update the
available file is dselect update. Note that this file is
mostly useless if you don't use dselect but an APT-based
frontend: APT has its own system to keep track of available
packages.
- -A, --record-avail
package-file...
- Update dpkg and dselect's idea of which packages are
available with information from the package package-file. If
--recursive or -R option is specified, package-file
must refer to a directory instead.
- --forget-old-unavail
- Now obsolete and a no-op as dpkg will automatically forget
uninstalled unavailable packages (since dpkg 1.15.4), but only those that
do not contain user information such as package selections.
- --clear-avail
- Erase the existing information about what packages are available.
- --get-selections
[package-name-pattern...]
- Get list of package selections, and write it to stdout. Without a pattern,
non-installed packages (i.e. those which have been previously purged) will
not be shown.
- --set-selections
- Set package selections using file read from stdin. This file should be in
the format “package state”, where state is one
of install, hold, deinstall or purge. Blank
lines and comment lines beginning with ‘#’ are also
permitted.
The available file needs to be up-to-date for this
command to be useful, otherwise unknown packages will be ignored with a
warning. See the --update-avail and --merge-avail commands
for more information.
- --clear-selections
- Set the requested state of every non-essential package to deinstall (since
dpkg 1.13.18). This is intended to be used immediately before
--set-selections, to deinstall any packages not in list given to
--set-selections.
- --yet-to-unpack
- Searches for packages selected for installation, but which for some reason
still haven't been installed.
Note: This command makes use of both the available file
and the package selections.
- --predep-package
- Print a single package which is the target of one or more relevant
pre-dependencies and has itself no unsatisfied pre-dependencies.
If such a package is present, output it as a Packages file
entry, which can be massaged as appropriate.
Note: This command makes use of both the available file
and the package selections.
Returns 0 when a package is printed, 1 when no suitable
package is available and 2 on error.
- --add-architecture
architecture
- Add architecture to the list of architectures for which packages
can be installed without using --force-architecture (since dpkg
1.16.2). The architecture dpkg is built for (i.e. the output of
--print-architecture) is always part of that list.
- --remove-architecture
architecture
- Remove architecture from the list of architectures for which
packages can be installed without using --force-architecture (since
dpkg 1.16.2). If the architecture is currently in use in the database then
the operation will be refused, except if --force-architecture is
specified. The architecture dpkg is built for (i.e. the output of
--print-architecture) can never be removed from that list.
- --print-architecture
- Print architecture of packages dpkg installs (for example,
“i386”).
- --print-foreign-architectures
- Print a newline-separated list of the extra architectures dpkg is
configured to allow packages to be installed for (since dpkg 1.16.2).
- --assert-help
- Give help about the --assert-feature options (since dpkg
1.21.0).
- --assert-feature
- Asserts that dpkg supports the requested feature. Returns 0 if the
feature is fully supported, 1 if the feature is known but dpkg
cannot provide support for it yet, and 2 if the feature is unknown. The
current list of assertable features is:
- support-predepends
- Supports the Pre-Depends field (since dpkg 1.1.0).
- working-epoch
- Supports epochs in version strings (since dpkg 1.4.0.7).
- long-filenames
- Supports long filenames in deb(5) archives (since dpkg
1.4.1.17).
- multi-conrep
- Supports multiple Conflicts and Replaces (since dpkg
1.4.1.19).
- multi-arch
- Supports multi-arch fields and semantics (since dpkg 1.16.2).
- versioned-provides
- Supports versioned Provides (since dpkg 1.17.11).
- protected-field
- Supports the Protected field (since dpkg 1.20.1).
- --validate-thing
string
- Validate that the thing string has a correct syntax (since
dpkg 1.18.16). Returns 0 if the string is valid, 1 if the
string is invalid but might be accepted in lax contexts, and 2 if
the string is invalid. The current list of validatable
things is:
- pkgname
- Validates the given package name (since dpkg 1.18.16).
- trigname
- Validates the given trigger name (since dpkg 1.18.16).
- archname
- Validates the given architecture name (since dpkg 1.18.16).
- version
- Validates the given version (since dpkg 1.18.16).
- --compare-versions
ver1 op ver2
- Compare version numbers, where op is a binary operator. dpkg
returns true (0) if the specified condition is satisfied, and false
(1) otherwise. There are two groups of operators, which differ in
how they treat an empty ver1 or ver2. These treat an empty
version as earlier than any version: lt le eq ne ge gt. These treat
an empty version as later than any version: lt-nl le-nl ge-nl
gt-nl. These are provided only for compatibility with control file
syntax: < << <= = >= >> >. The
< and > operators are obsolete and should not
be used, due to confusing semantics. To illustrate: 0.1 < 0.1
evaluates to true.
- -?, --help
- Display a brief help message.
- --force-help
- Give help about the --force-thing options.
- -Dh,
--debug=help
- Give help about debugging options.
- --version
- Display dpkg version information.
When used with --robot, the output will be the program
version number in a dotted numerical format, with no newline.
- dpkg-deb
actions
- See dpkg-deb(1) for more information about the following actions,
and other actions and options not exposed by the dpkg
front-end.
- dpkg-query
actions
- See dpkg-query(1) for more information about the following actions,
and other actions and options not exposed by the dpkg
front-end.
All options can be specified both on the command line and in the
dpkg configuration file /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg or fragment files
(with names matching this shell pattern '[0-9a-zA-Z_-]*') on the
configuration directory /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/. Each line in the
configuration file is either an option (exactly the same as the command line
option but without leading hyphens) or a comment (if it starts with a
‘#’).
- --abort-after=number
- Change after how many errors dpkg will abort. The default is
50.
- -B,
--auto-deconfigure
- When a package is removed, there is a possibility that another installed
package depended on the removed package. Specifying this option will cause
automatic deconfiguration of the package which depended on the removed
package.
- -Doctal,
--debug=octal
- Switch debugging on. octal is formed by bitwise-ORing desired
values together from the list below (note that these values may change in
future releases). -Dh or --debug=help display these
debugging values.
Number Description
1 Generally helpful progress information
2 Invocation and status of maintainer scripts
10 Output for each file processed
100 Lots of output for each file processed
20 Output for each configuration file
200 Lots of output for each configuration file
40 Dependencies and conflicts
400 Lots of dependencies/conflicts output
10000 Trigger activation and processing
20000 Lots of output regarding triggers
40000 Silly amounts of output regarding triggers
1000 Lots of drivel about for example the dpkg/info dir
2000 Insane amounts of drivel
- --force-things
- --no-force-things,
--refuse-things
- Force or refuse (no-force and refuse mean the same thing) to
do some things. things is a comma separated list of things
specified below. --force-help displays a message describing them.
Things marked with (*) are forced by default.
Warning: These options are mostly intended to be used
by experts only. Using them without fully understanding their effects
may break your whole system.
- all:
- Turns on (or off) all force options.
- downgrade(*):
- Install a package, even if newer version of it is already installed.
Warning: At present dpkg does not do any
dependency checking on downgrades and therefore will not warn you if the
downgrade breaks the dependency of some other package. This can have
serious side effects, downgrading essential system components can even
make your whole system unusable. Use with care.
- configure-any:
- Configure also any unpacked but unconfigured packages on which the current
package depends.
- hold:
- Allow automatic installs, upgrades or removals of packages even when
marked to be on “hold”. Note: When these actions are
requested explicitly, the “hold” package selection state
always gets ignored.
- remove-reinstreq:
- Remove a package, even if it's broken and marked to require
reinstallation. This may, for example, cause parts of the package to
remain on the system, which will then be forgotten by dpkg.
- remove-protected:
- Remove, even if the package is considered protected (since dpkg 1.20.1).
Protected packages contain mostly important system boot infrastructure or
are used for custom system-local meta-packages. Removing them might cause
the whole system to be unable to boot or lose required functionality to
operate, so use with caution.
- remove-essential:
- Remove, even if the package is considered essential. Essential packages
contain mostly very basic Unix commands, required for the packaging
system, for the operation of the system in general or during boot
(although the latter should be converted to protected packages instead).
Removing them might cause the whole system to stop working, so use with
caution.
- depends:
- Turn all dependency problems into warnings. This affects the
Pre-Depends and Depends fields.
- depends-version:
- Don't care about versions when checking dependencies. This affects the
Pre-Depends and Depends fields.
- breaks:
- Install, even if this would break another package (since dpkg 1.14.6).
This affects the Breaks field.
- conflicts:
- Install, even if it conflicts with another package. This is dangerous, for
it will usually cause overwriting of some files. This affects the
Conflicts field.
- confmiss:
- Always install the missing conffile without prompting. This is dangerous,
since it means not preserving a change (removing) made to the file.
- confnew:
- If a conffile has been modified and the version in the package did change,
always install the new version without prompting, unless the
--force-confdef is also specified, in which case the default action
is preferred.
- confold:
- If a conffile has been modified and the version in the package did change,
always keep the old version without prompting, unless the
--force-confdef is also specified, in which case the default action
is preferred.
- confdef:
- If a conffile has been modified and the version in the package did change,
always choose the default action without prompting. If there is no default
action it will stop to ask the user unless --force-confnew or
--force-confold is also given, in which case it will use that to
decide the final action.
- confask:
- If a conffile has been modified always offer to replace it with the
version in the package, even if the version in the package did not change
(since dpkg 1.15.8). If any of --force-confnew,
--force-confold, or --force-confdef is also given, it will
be used to decide the final action.
- overwrite:
- Overwrite one package's file with another's file.
- overwrite-dir:
- Overwrite one package's directory with another's file.
- overwrite-diverted:
- Overwrite a diverted file with an undiverted version.
- statoverride-add:
- Overwrite an existing stat override when adding it (since dpkg
1.19.5).
- statoverride-remove:
- Ignore a missing stat override when removing it (since dpkg 1.19.5).
- security-mac(*):
- Use platform-specific Mandatory Access Controls (MAC) based security when
installing files into the filesystem (since dpkg 1.19.5). On Linux systems
the implementation uses SELinux.
- unsafe-io:
- Do not perform safe I/O operations when unpacking (since dpkg 1.15.8.6).
Currently this implies not performing file system syncs before file
renames, which is known to cause substantial performance degradation on
some file systems, unfortunately the ones that require the safe I/O on the
first place due to their unreliable behaviour causing zero-length files on
abrupt system crashes.
Note: For ext4, the main offender, consider using
instead the mount option nodelalloc, which will fix both the
performance degradation and the data safety issues, the latter by making
the file system not produce zero-length files on abrupt system crashes
with any software not doing syncs before atomic renames.
Warning: Using this option might improve performance at
the cost of losing data, use with care.
- script-chrootless:
- Run maintainer scripts without chroot(2)ing into instdir
even if the package does not support this mode of operation (since dpkg
1.18.5).
Warning: This can destroy your host system, use with
extreme care.
- architecture:
- Process even packages with wrong or no architecture.
- bad-version:
- Process even packages with wrong versions (since dpkg 1.16.1).
- bad-path:
- PATH is missing important programs, so problems are likely.
- not-root:
- Try to (de)install things even when not root.
- bad-verify:
- Install a package even if it fails authenticity check.
- --ignore-depends=package,...
- Ignore dependency-checking for specified packages (actually, checking is
performed, but only warnings about conflicts are given, nothing else).
This affects the Pre-Depends, Depends and Breaks
fields.
- --no-act,
--dry-run, --simulate
- Do everything which is supposed to be done, but don't write any changes.
This is used to see what would happen with the specified action, without
actually modifying anything.
Be sure to give --no-act before the action-parameter,
or you might end up with undesirable results (e.g. dpkg --purge foo
--no-act will first purge package “foo” and then try
to purge package ”--no-act”, even though you probably
expected it to actually do nothing).
- -R,
--recursive
- Recursively handle all regular files matching pattern *.deb found
at specified directories and all of its subdirectories. This can be used
with -i, -A, --install, --unpack and
--record-avail actions.
- -G
- Don't install a package if a newer version of the same package is already
installed. This is an alias of --refuse-downgrade.
- --admindir=dir
- Set the administrative directory to directory. This directory
contains many files that give information about status of installed or
uninstalled packages, etc. Defaults to
«/var/lib/dpkg» if DPKG_ADMINDIR has not been
set.
- --instdir=dir
- Set the installation directory, which refers to the directory where
packages are to be installed. instdir is also the directory passed
to chroot(2) before running package's installation scripts, which
means that the scripts see instdir as a root directory. Defaults to
«/».
- --root=dir
- Set the root directory to directory, which sets the installation
directory to «dir» and the administrative directory
to «dir/var/lib/dpkg».
- -O,
--selected-only
- Only process the packages that are selected for installation. The actual
marking is done with dselect or by dpkg, when it handles
packages. For example, when a package is removed, it will be marked
selected for deinstallation.
- -E,
--skip-same-version
- Don't install the package if the same version and architecture of the
package is already installed.
Since dpkg 1.21.10, the architecture is also taken into
account, which makes it possible to cross-grade packages or install
additional co-installable instances with the same version, but different
architecture.
- --pre-invoke=command
- --post-invoke=command
- Set an invoke hook command to be run via “sh -c”
before or after the dpkg run for the unpack,
configure, install, triggers-only, remove and
purge actions (since dpkg 1.15.4), and add-architecture and
remove-architecture actions (since dpkg 1.17.19). This option can
be specified multiple times. The order the options are specified is
preserved, with the ones from the configuration files taking precedence.
The environment variable DPKG_HOOK_ACTION is set for the hooks to
the current dpkg action.
Note: Front-ends might call dpkg several times
per invocation, which might run the hooks more times than expected.
- --path-exclude=glob-pattern
- --path-include=glob-pattern
- Set glob-pattern as a path filter, either by excluding or
re-including previously excluded paths matching the specified patterns
during install (since dpkg 1.15.8).
Warning: Take into account that depending on the
excluded paths you might completely break your system, use with
caution.
The glob patterns use the same wildcards used in the shell,
were ‘*’ matches any sequence of characters, including the
empty string and also ‘/’. For example,
«/usr/*/READ*» matches
«/usr/share/doc/package/README». As usual,
‘?’ matches any single character (again, including
‘/’). And ‘[’ starts a character class,
which can contain a list of characters, ranges and complementations. See
glob(7) for detailed information about globbing. Note: The
current implementation might re-include more directories and symlinks
than needed, in particular when there is a more specific re-inclusion,
to be on the safe side and avoid possible unpack failures; future work
might fix this.
This can be used to remove all paths except some particular
ones; a typical case is:
--path-exclude=/usr/share/doc/*
--path-include=/usr/share/doc/*/copyright
to remove all documentation files except the copyright
files.
These two options can be specified multiple times, and
interleaved with each other. Both are processed in the given order, with
the last rule that matches a file name making the decision.
The filters are applied when unpacking the binary packages,
and as such only have knowledge of the type of object currently being
filtered (e.g. a normal file or a directory) and have not visibility of
what objects will come next. Because these filters have side effects (in
contrast to find(1) filters), excluding an exact pathname that
happens to be a directory object like /usr/share/doc will not
have the desired result, and only that pathname will be excluded (which
could be automatically reincluded if the code sees the need). Any
subsequent files contained within that directory will fail to
unpack.
Hint: make sure the globs are not expanded by your
shell.
- --verify-format
format-name
- Sets the output format for the --verify command (since dpkg
1.17.2).
The only currently supported output format is rpm,
which consists of a line for every path that failed any check. These
lines have the following format:
missing [c] pathname
[(error-message)]
??5?????? [c] pathname
The first 9 characters are used to report the checks result,
either a literal missing when the file is not present or its
metadata cannot be fetched, or one of the following special characters
that report the result for each check:
- ‘?’
- Implies the check could not be done (lack of support, file permissions,
etc).
- ‘.’
- Implies the check passed.
- ‘A-Za-z0-9’
- Implies a specific check failed. The following positions and alphanumeric
characters are currently supported:
- 1 ‘?’
- These checks are currently not supported, will always be
‘?’.
- 2 ‘M’
- The file mode check failed (since dpkg 1.21.0). Because pathname metadata
is currently not tracked, this check can only be partially emulated via a
very simple heuristic for pathnames that have a known digest, which
implies they should be regular files, where the check will fail if the
pathname is not a regular file on the filesystem. This check will
currently never succeed as it does not have enough information
available.
- 3 ‘5’
- The digest check failed, which means the file contents have changed. This
is only an integrity check and should not be considered as any kind of
security verification.
- 4-9 ‘?’
- These checks are currently not supported, will always be
‘?’.
The line is followed by a space and an attribute character. The
following attribute character is supported:
- ‘c’
- The pathname is a conffile.
Finally followed by another space and the pathname.
In case the entry was of the missing type, and the file was
not actually present on the filesystem, then the line is followed by a space
and the error message enclosed within parenthesis.
- --status-fd
n
- Send machine-readable package status and progress information to file
descriptor n. This option can be specified multiple times. The
information is generally one record per line, in one of the following
forms:
- --status-logger=command
- Send machine-readable package status and progress information to the shell
command's standard input, to be run via “sh -c”
(since dpkg 1.16.0). This option can be specified multiple times. The
output format used is the same as in --status-fd.
- --log=filename
- Log status change updates and actions to filename, instead of the
default /var/log/dpkg.log. If this option is given multiple times,
the last filename is used. Log messages are of the form:
- --robot
- Use a machine-readable output format. This provides an interface for
programs that need to parse the output of some of the commands that do not
otherwise emit a machine-readable output format. No localization will be
used, and the output will be modified to make it easier to parse.
The only currently supported command is --version.
- --no-pager
- Disables the use of any pager when showing information (since dpkg
1.19.2).
- --no-debsig
- Do not try to verify package signatures.
- --no-triggers
- Do not run any triggers in this run (since dpkg 1.14.17), but activations
will still be recorded. If used with --configure package or
--triggers-only package then the named package postinst will
still be run even if only a triggers run is needed. Use of this option may
leave packages in the improper triggers-awaited and
triggers-pending states. This can be fixed later by running:
dpkg --configure --pending.
- --triggers
- Cancels a previous --no-triggers (since dpkg 1.14.17).
- 0
- The requested action was successfully performed. Or a check or assertion
command returned true.
- 1
- A check or assertion command returned false.
- 2
- Fatal or unrecoverable error due to invalid command-line usage, or
interactions with the system, such as accesses to the database, memory
allocations, etc.
- PATH
- This variable is expected to be defined in the environment and point to
the system paths where several required programs are to be found. If it's
not set or the programs are not found, dpkg will abort.
- HOME
- If set, dpkg will use it as the directory from which to read the
user specific configuration file.
- TMPDIR
- If set, dpkg will use it as the directory in which to create
temporary files and directories.
- SHELL
- The program dpkg will execute when starting a new interactive
shell, or when spawning a command via a shell.
- The program dpkg will execute when running a pager, which will be
executed with «$SHELL
-c», for example when displaying the conffile differences. If
SHELL is not set, «sh» will be used instead.
The DPKG_PAGER overrides the PAGER environment variable
(since dpkg 1.19.2).
- DPKG_COLORS
- Sets the color mode (since dpkg 1.18.5). The currently accepted values
are: auto (default), always and never.
- DPKG_DEBUG
- Sets the debug mask (since dpkg 1.21.10) from an octal value. The
currently accepted flags are described in the --debug option.
- DPKG_FORCE
- Sets the force flags (since dpkg 1.19.5). When this variable is present,
no built-in force defaults will be applied. If the variable is present but
empty, all force flags will be disabled.
- DPKG_ADMINDIR
- If set and the --admindir or --root options have not been
specified, it will be used as the dpkg administrative directory
(since dpkg 1.20.0).
- DPKG_FRONTEND_LOCKED
- Set by a package manager frontend to notify dpkg that it should not
acquire the frontend lock (since dpkg 1.19.1).
- LESS
- Defined by dpkg to “-FRSXMQ”, if not already
set, when spawning a pager (since dpkg 1.19.2). To change the default
behavior, this variable can be preset to some other value including an
empty string, or the PAGER or DPKG_PAGER variables can be
set to disable specific options with «-+», for
example DPKG_PAGER="less -+F".
- DPKG_ROOT
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to indicate
which installation to act on (since dpkg 1.18.5). The value is intended to
be prepended to any path maintainer scripts operate on. During normal
operation, this variable is empty. When installing packages into a
different instdir, dpkg normally invokes maintainer scripts
using chroot(2) and leaves this variable empty, but if
--force-script-chrootless is specified then the chroot(2)
call is skipped and instdir is non-empty.
- DPKG_ADMINDIR
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to indicate
the dpkg administrative directory to use (since dpkg 1.16.0). This
variable is always set to the current --admindir value.
- DPKG_FORCE
- Defined by dpkg on the subprocesses environment to all the
currently enabled force option names separated by commas (since dpkg
1.19.5).
- DPKG_SHELL_REASON
- Defined by dpkg on the shell spawned on the conffile prompt to
examine the situation (since dpkg 1.15.6). Current valid value:
conffile-prompt.
- DPKG_CONFFILE_OLD
- Defined by dpkg on the shell spawned on the conffile prompt to
examine the situation (since dpkg 1.15.6). Contains the path to the old
conffile.
- DPKG_CONFFILE_NEW
- Defined by dpkg on the shell spawned on the conffile prompt to
examine the situation (since dpkg 1.15.6). Contains the path to the new
conffile.
- DPKG_HOOK_ACTION
- Defined by dpkg on the shell spawned when executing a hook action
(since dpkg 1.15.4). Contains the current dpkg action.
- DPKG_RUNNING_VERSION
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to the version
of the currently running dpkg instance (since dpkg 1.14.17).
- DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_PACKAGE
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to the
(non-arch-qualified) package name being handled (since dpkg 1.14.17).
- DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_PACKAGE_REFCOUNT
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to the package
reference count, i.e. the number of package instances with a state greater
than not-installed (since dpkg 1.17.2).
- DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_ARCH
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to the
architecture the package got built for (since dpkg 1.15.4).
- DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_NAME
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to the name of
the script running, one of preinst, postinst, prerm
or postrm (since dpkg 1.15.7).
- DPKG_MAINTSCRIPT_DEBUG
- Defined by dpkg on the maintainer script environment to a value
(‘0’ or ‘1’) noting whether
debugging has been requested (with the --debug option) for the
maintainer scripts (since dpkg 1.18.4).
- /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg.d/[0-9a-zA-Z_-]*
- Configuration fragment files (since dpkg 1.15.4).
- /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg
- Configuration file with default options.
- /var/log/dpkg.log
- Default log file (see /etc/dpkg/dpkg.cfg and option
--log).
The other files listed below are in their default directories, see
option --admindir to see how to change locations of these files.
- /var/lib/dpkg/available
- List of available packages.
- /var/lib/dpkg/status
- Statuses of available packages. This file contains information about
whether a package is marked for removing or not, whether it is installed
or not, etc. See section "INFORMATION ABOUT PACKAGES" for more
info.
The status file is backed up daily in /var/backups. It
can be useful if it's lost or corrupted due to filesystems troubles.
The format and contents of a binary package are described in
deb(5).
During unpacking and configuration dpkg uses various
filenames for backup and rollback purposes. The following is a simplified
explanation of how these filenames get used during package installation.
- *.dpkg-new
- During unpack, dpkg extracts new filesystem objects into
pathname.dpkg-new (except for existing directories or
symlinks to directories which get skipped), once that is done and after
having performed backups of the old objects, the objects get renamed to
pathname.
- *.dpkg-tmp
- During unpack, dpkg makes backups of the old filesystem objects
into pathname.dpkg-tmp after extracting the new objects.
These backups are performed as either a rename for directories (but only
if they switch file type), a new symlink copy for symlinks, or a hard link
for any other filesystem object, except for conffiles which get no backups
because they are processed at a later stage.
In case of needing to rollback, these backups get used to
restore the previous contents of the objects. These get removed
automatically after the installation is complete.
- *.dpkg-old
- During configuration, when installing a new version, dpkg can make
a backup of the previous modified conffile into
pathname.dpkg-old.
- *.dpkg-dist
- During configuration, when keeping the old version, dpkg can make a
backup of the new unmodified conffile into
pathname.dpkg-dist.
Any operation that needs write access to the database or the
filesystem is considered a privileged operation that might allow root
escalation. These operations must never be delegated to an untrusted user or
be done on untrusted packages, as that might allow root access to the
system.
Some operations (such as package verification) might need root
privileges to be able to access files on the filesystem that would otherwise
be inaccessible due to restricted permissions, but should otherwise work
normally and produce appropriate messages in those cases.
Query operations should never require root, and delegating their
execution to unprivileged users via some gain-root command can have security
implications (such as privilege escalation), for example when a pager is
automatically invoked by the tool.
See also the SECURITY section of the dpkg-deb(1) and
dpkg-split(1) manual pages.
--no-act usually gives less information than might be
helpful.
To list installed packages related to the editor vi(1)
(note that dpkg-query does not load the available file anymore
by default, and the dpkg-query --load-avail option should be
used instead for that):
dpkg -l '*vi*'
To see the entries in /var/lib/dpkg/available of two
packages:
dpkg --print-avail vim neovim | less
To search the listing of packages yourself:
dpkg --print-avail | less
To remove an installed neovim package:
dpkg -r neovim
To install a package, you first need to find it in an archive or
media disc. When using an archive based on a pool structure, knowing the
archive area and the name of the package is enough to infer the
pathname:
dpkg -i /media/bdrom/pool/main/v/vim/vim_9.0.2018-1_amd64.deb
To make a local copy of the package selection states:
dpkg --get-selections >myselections
You might transfer this file to another computer, and after having
updated the available file there with your package manager frontend
of choice (see <https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/Dpkg/FAQ#set-selections>
for more details), for example:
apt-cache dumpavail | dpkg --merge-avail
you can install it with:
dpkg --clear-selections
dpkg --set-selections <myselections
Note that this will not actually install or remove anything, but
just set the selection state on the requested packages. You will need some
other application to actually download and install the requested packages.
For example, run apt-get dselect-upgrade.
Ordinarily, you will find that dselect(1) provides a more
convenient way to modify the package selection states.
Additional functionality can be gained by installing any of the
following packages: apt, aptitude and
debsig-verify.
aptitude(8), apt(8), dselect(1),
dpkg-deb(1), dpkg-query(1), deb(5),
deb-control(5), dpkg.cfg(5), and
dpkg-reconfigure(8).
See /usr/share/doc/dpkg/THANKS for the list of people who
have contributed to dpkg.