Reputation: 44807
Is there a way of getting dpkg, apt-get or aptitude to produce a list of the packages which need to be installed on a second machine to duplicate the packages installed on a first?
i.e. If I've installed a plain Ubuntu server, chose the sshd option at install time, then installed build-essential I would expect the output to look something like:
#ubuntu 9.10 server
openssh-sshd
build-essential
As far as I can see, all the available packaging tools will produce a verbose list of the packages on a box. I'm not interested in openssh libs, ld, gcc, and all the other packages pulled in by sshd and build-essential, as they will be installed when I install sshd and build-essential.
I would like to see just the list of the package which I need to install to recreate my current set of packages on another machine.
Is this possible?
Upvotes: 13
Views: 8631
Reputation: 221
What about this:
#!/bin/bash
packages=$(dpkg --get-selections | grep '[[:space:]]install$' | awk '{print $1}')
for pkg in $packages
do
nr_lines=$(apt-cache -i rdepends $pkg | wc -l )
if [ "$nr_lines" = "2" ]
then
echo $pkg
fi
done
Does it work well? Can it be improved somehow?
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 45077
The code that dannysauer posted is a start. Once you have a list of packages that includes dependencies, you can use apt-rdepends
to find the dependencies for a particular package (see this page for example usage and output).
Procedure outline
apt-rdepends
on eachapt-rdepends
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2962
deborphan
, sort of. It builds a list of every package in your system, figures out what depends on what, and prints out the packages that don't have any dependencies. By default it only prints libraries (to make it easy to find libraries that were installed by other packages and no longer needed, hence the name). It has options for doing what you want, mostly. I run it like:
deborphan -anp required --no-show-section
-a
specifies all packages (not just libraries)
-n
ignores "Suggests" or "Recommends" dependency checking (i.e. just "Depends")
-p required
lists all packages despite priority
--no-show-section
doesn't indicate which part of debian it's in, just a nice formatting feature you might find useful for building a list.
Now, it will miss packages, because some packages have circular dependencies. But those tend to be fairly uncommon, so it should get you close enough.
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 3877
So, you want the list of packages which were explicitly installed (like, say, ubuntu-desktop and openssh), and not the auto-dependencies? I'm not positive, but I think that's what dpkg --get-selections
does. So, you can do
dpkg --get-selections > file
And then, on the other computer, use the same "file" and run
dpkg --set-selections < file
apt-get dselect-upgrade
I'm not absolutely positive that those commands just do manually selected packages, though, and I'm currently away from any Debian-based systems to verify on. :)
Upvotes: 1