1APT-GET(8)                            APT                           APT-GET(8)
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3
4

NAME

6       apt-get - APT package handling utility -- command-line interface
7

SYNOPSIS

9       apt-get [-asqdyfmubV] [-o=config_string] [-c=config_file]
10               [-t=target_release] [-a=architecture] {update | upgrade |
11               dselect-upgrade | dist-upgrade |
12               install pkg [{=pkg_version_number | /target_release}]...  |
13               remove pkg...  | purge pkg...  |
14               source pkg [{=pkg_version_number | /target_release}]...  |
15               build-dep pkg [{=pkg_version_number | /target_release}]...  |
16               download pkg [{=pkg_version_number | /target_release}]...  |
17               check | clean | autoclean | autoremove | {-v | --version} |
18               {-h | --help}}
19

DESCRIPTION

21       apt-get is the command-line tool for handling packages, and may be
22       considered the user's "back-end" to other tools using the APT library.
23       Several "front-end" interfaces exist, such as aptitude(8), synaptic(8)
24       and wajig(1).
25
26       Unless the -h, or --help option is given, one of the commands below
27       must be present.
28
29       update
30           update is used to resynchronize the package index files from their
31           sources. The indexes of available packages are fetched from the
32           location(s) specified in /etc/apt/sources.list. For example, when
33           using a Debian archive, this command retrieves and scans the
34           Packages.gz files, so that information about new and updated
35           packages is available. An update should always be performed before
36           an upgrade or dist-upgrade. Please be aware that the overall
37           progress meter will be incorrect as the size of the package files
38           cannot be known in advance.
39
40       upgrade
41           upgrade is used to install the newest versions of all packages
42           currently installed on the system from the sources enumerated in
43           /etc/apt/sources.list. Packages currently installed with new
44           versions available are retrieved and upgraded; under no
45           circumstances are currently installed packages removed, or packages
46           not already installed retrieved and installed. New versions of
47           currently installed packages that cannot be upgraded without
48           changing the install status of another package will be left at
49           their current version. An update must be performed first so that
50           apt-get knows that new versions of packages are available.
51
52       dist-upgrade
53           dist-upgrade in addition to performing the function of upgrade,
54           also intelligently handles changing dependencies with new versions
55           of packages; apt-get has a "smart" conflict resolution system, and
56           it will attempt to upgrade the most important packages at the
57           expense of less important ones if necessary. The dist-upgrade
58           command may therefore remove some packages. The
59           /etc/apt/sources.list file contains a list of locations from which
60           to retrieve desired package files. See also apt_preferences(5) for
61           a mechanism for overriding the general settings for individual
62           packages.
63
64       dselect-upgrade
65           dselect-upgrade is used in conjunction with the traditional Debian
66           packaging front-end, dselect(1).  dselect-upgrade follows the
67           changes made by dselect(1) to the Status field of available
68           packages, and performs the actions necessary to realize that state
69           (for instance, the removal of old and the installation of new
70           packages).
71
72       install
73           install is followed by one or more packages desired for
74           installation or upgrading. Each package is a package name, not a
75           fully qualified filename (for instance, in a Debian system,
76           apt-utils would be the argument provided, not
77           apt-utils_2.7.6_amd64.deb). All packages required by the package(s)
78           specified for installation will also be retrieved and installed.
79           The /etc/apt/sources.list file is used to locate the desired
80           packages. If a hyphen is appended to the package name (with no
81           intervening space), the identified package will be removed if it is
82           installed. Similarly a plus sign can be used to designate a package
83           to install. These latter features may be used to override decisions
84           made by apt-get's conflict resolution system.
85
86           A specific version of a package can be selected for installation by
87           following the package name with an equals and the version of the
88           package to select. This will cause that version to be located and
89           selected for install. Alternatively a specific distribution can be
90           selected by following the package name with a slash and the version
91           of the distribution or the Archive name (stable, testing,
92           unstable).
93
94           Both of the version selection mechanisms can downgrade packages and
95           must be used with care.
96
97           This is also the target to use if you want to upgrade one or more
98           already-installed packages without upgrading every package you have
99           on your system. Unlike the "upgrade" target, which installs the
100           newest version of all currently installed packages, "install" will
101           install the newest version of only the package(s) specified. Simply
102           provide the name of the package(s) you wish to upgrade, and if a
103           newer version is available, it (and its dependencies, as described
104           above) will be downloaded and installed.
105
106           Finally, the apt_preferences(5) mechanism allows you to create an
107           alternative installation policy for individual packages.
108
109           If no package matches the given expression and the expression
110           contains one of '.', '?' or '*' then it is assumed to be a POSIX
111           regular expression, and it is applied to all package names in the
112           database. Any matches are then installed (or removed). Note that
113           matching is done by substring so 'lo.*' matches 'how-lo' and
114           'lowest'. If this is undesired, anchor the regular expression with
115           a '^' or '$' character, or create a more specific regular
116           expression.
117
118           Fallback to regular expressions is deprecated in APT 2.0, has been
119           removed in apt(8), except for anchored expressions, and will be
120           removed from apt-get(8) in a future version. Use apt-patterns(7)
121           instead.
122
123       reinstall
124           reinstall is an alias for install --reinstall.
125
126       remove
127           remove is identical to install except that packages are removed
128           instead of installed. Note that removing a package leaves its
129           configuration files on the system. If a plus sign is appended to
130           the package name (with no intervening space), the identified
131           package will be installed instead of removed.
132
133       purge
134           purge is identical to remove except that packages are removed and
135           purged (any configuration files are deleted too).
136
137       source
138           source causes apt-get to fetch source packages. APT will examine
139           the available packages to decide which source package to fetch. It
140           will then find and download into the current directory the newest
141           available version of that source package while respecting the
142           default release, set with the option APT::Default-Release, the -t
143           option or per package with the pkg/release syntax, if possible.
144
145           The arguments are interpreted as binary and source package names.
146           See the --only-source option if you want to change that.
147
148           Source packages are tracked separately from binary packages via
149           deb-src lines in the sources.list(5) file. This means that you will
150           need to add such a line for each repository you want to get sources
151           from; otherwise you will probably get either the wrong (too old/too
152           new) source versions or none at all.
153
154           If the --compile option is specified then the package will be
155           compiled to a binary .deb using dpkg-buildpackage for the
156           architecture as defined by the --host-architecture option. If
157           --download-only is specified then the source package will not be
158           unpacked.
159
160           A specific source version can be retrieved by postfixing the source
161           name with an equals and then the version to fetch, similar to the
162           mechanism used for the package files. This enables exact matching
163           of the source package name and version, implicitly enabling the
164           APT::Get::Only-Source option.
165
166           Note that source packages are not installed and tracked in the dpkg
167           database like binary packages; they are simply downloaded to the
168           current directory, like source tarballs.
169
170       build-dep
171           build-dep causes apt-get to install/remove packages in an attempt
172           to satisfy the build dependencies for a source package. By default
173           the dependencies are satisfied to build the package natively. If
174           desired a host-architecture can be specified with the
175           --host-architecture option instead.
176
177           The arguments are interpreted as binary or source package names.
178           See the --only-source option if you want to change that.
179
180       satisfy
181           satisfy causes apt-get to satisfy the given dependency strings. The
182           dependency strings may have build profiles and architecture
183           restriction list as in build dependencies. They may optionally be
184           prefixed with "Conflicts: " to unsatisfy the dependency string.
185           Multiple strings of the same type can be specified.
186
187           Example: apt-get satisfy "foo" "Conflicts: bar" "baz (>> 1.0) | bar
188           (= 2.0), moo"
189
190           The legacy operator '</>' is not supported, use '<=/>=' instead.
191
192       check
193           check is a diagnostic tool; it updates the package cache and checks
194           for broken dependencies.
195
196       download
197           download will download the given binary package into the current
198           directory. The authenticity of the package data is ensured as
199           usual.
200
201       clean
202           clean clears out the local repository of retrieved package files.
203           It removes everything but the lock file from
204           /var/cache/apt/archives/ and /var/cache/apt/archives/partial/.
205
206       autoclean (and the auto-clean alias since 1.1)
207           Like clean, autoclean clears out the local repository of retrieved
208           package files. The difference is that it only removes package files
209           that can no longer be downloaded, and are largely useless. This
210           allows a cache to be maintained over a long period without it
211           growing out of control. The configuration option
212           APT::Clean-Installed will prevent installed packages from being
213           erased if it is set to off.
214
215       autoremove (and the auto-remove alias since 1.1)
216           autoremove is used to remove packages that were automatically
217           installed to satisfy dependencies for other packages and are now no
218           longer needed.
219
220       autopurge
221           Like autoremove, but autopurge also removes configuration files.
222           This is a shortcut for autoremove --purge.
223
224       changelog
225           changelog tries to download the changelog of a package and displays
226           it through sensible-pager. By default it displays the changelog for
227           the version that is installed. However, you can specify the same
228           options as for the install command.
229
230       indextargets
231           Displays by default a deb822 formatted listing of information about
232           all data files (aka index targets) apt-get update would download.
233           Supports a --format option to modify the output format as well as
234           accepts lines of the default output to filter the records by. The
235           command is mainly used as an interface for external tools working
236           with APT to get information as well as filenames for downloaded
237           files so they can use them as well instead of downloading them
238           again on their own. Detailed documentation is omitted here and can
239           instead be found in the file
240           /usr/share/doc/apt/acquire-additional-files.md.gz shipped by the
241           apt-doc package.
242

OPTIONS

244       All command line options may be set using the configuration file, the
245       descriptions indicate the configuration option to set. For boolean
246       options you can override the config file by using something like
247       -f-,--no-f, -f=no or several other variations.
248
249       --no-install-recommends
250           Do not consider recommended packages as a dependency for
251           installing. Configuration Item: APT::Install-Recommends.
252
253       --install-suggests
254           Consider suggested packages as a dependency for installing.
255           Configuration Item: APT::Install-Suggests.
256
257       -d, --download-only
258           Download only; package files are only retrieved, not unpacked or
259           installed. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Download-Only.
260
261       -f, --fix-broken
262           Fix; attempt to correct a system with broken dependencies in place.
263           This option, when used with install/remove, can omit any packages
264           to permit APT to deduce a likely solution. If packages are
265           specified, these have to completely correct the problem. The option
266           is sometimes necessary when running APT for the first time; APT
267           itself does not allow broken package dependencies to exist on a
268           system. It is possible that a system's dependency structure can be
269           so corrupt as to require manual intervention (which usually means
270           using dpkg --remove to eliminate some of the offending packages).
271           Use of this option together with -m may produce an error in some
272           situations. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Fix-Broken.
273
274       -m, --ignore-missing, --fix-missing
275           Ignore missing packages; if packages cannot be retrieved or fail
276           the integrity check after retrieval (corrupted package files), hold
277           back those packages and handle the result. Use of this option
278           together with -f may produce an error in some situations. If a
279           package is selected for installation (particularly if it is
280           mentioned on the command line) and it could not be downloaded then
281           it will be silently held back. Configuration Item:
282           APT::Get::Fix-Missing.
283
284       --no-download
285           Disables downloading of packages. This is best used with
286           --ignore-missing to force APT to use only the .debs it has already
287           downloaded. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Download.
288
289       -q, --quiet
290           Quiet; produces output suitable for logging, omitting progress
291           indicators. More q's will produce more quiet up to a maximum of 2.
292           You can also use -q=# to set the quiet level, overriding the
293           configuration file. Note that quiet level 2 implies -y; you should
294           never use -qq without a no-action modifier such as -d, --print-uris
295           or -s as APT may decide to do something you did not expect.
296           Configuration Item: quiet.
297
298       -s, --simulate, --just-print, --dry-run, --recon, --no-act
299           No action; perform a simulation of events that would occur based on
300           the current system state but do not actually change the system.
301           Locking will be disabled (Debug::NoLocking) so the system state
302           could change while apt-get is running. Simulations can also be
303           executed by non-root users which might not have read access to all
304           apt configuration distorting the simulation. A notice expressing
305           this warning is also shown by default for non-root users
306           (APT::Get::Show-User-Simulation-Note). Configuration Item:
307           APT::Get::Simulate.
308
309           Simulated runs print out a series of lines, each representing a
310           dpkg operation: configure (Conf), remove (Remv) or unpack (Inst).
311           Square brackets indicate broken packages, and empty square brackets
312           indicate breaks that are of no consequence (rare).
313
314       -y, --yes, --assume-yes
315           Automatic yes to prompts; assume "yes" as answer to all prompts and
316           run non-interactively. If an undesirable situation, such as
317           changing a held package, trying to install an unauthenticated
318           package or removing an essential package occurs then apt-get will
319           abort. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Assume-Yes.
320
321       --assume-no
322           Automatic "no" to all prompts. Configuration Item:
323           APT::Get::Assume-No.
324
325       --no-show-upgraded
326           Do not show a list of all packages that are to be upgraded.
327           Configuration Item: APT::Get::Show-Upgraded.
328
329       -V, --verbose-versions
330           Show full versions for upgraded and installed packages.
331           Configuration Item: APT::Get::Show-Versions.
332
333       -a, --host-architecture
334           This option controls the architecture packages are built for by
335           apt-get source --compile and how cross-builddependencies are
336           satisfied. By default is it not set which means that the host
337           architecture is the same as the build architecture (which is
338           defined by APT::Architecture). Configuration Item:
339           APT::Get::Host-Architecture.
340
341       -P, --build-profiles
342           This option controls the activated build profiles for which a
343           source package is built by apt-get source --compile and how build
344           dependencies are satisfied. By default no build profile is active.
345           More than one build profile can be activated at a time by
346           concatenating them with a comma. Configuration Item:
347           APT::Build-Profiles.
348
349       -b, --compile, --build
350           Compile source packages after downloading them. Configuration Item:
351           APT::Get::Compile.
352
353       --ignore-hold
354           Ignore package holds; this causes apt-get to ignore a hold placed
355           on a package. This may be useful in conjunction with dist-upgrade
356           to override a large number of undesired holds. Configuration Item:
357           APT::Ignore-Hold.
358
359       --with-new-pkgs
360           Allow installing new packages when used in conjunction with
361           upgrade. This is useful if the update of an installed package
362           requires new dependencies to be installed. Instead of holding the
363           package back upgrade will upgrade the package and install the new
364           dependencies. Note that upgrade with this option will never remove
365           packages, only allow adding new ones. Configuration Item:
366           APT::Get::Upgrade-Allow-New.
367
368       --no-upgrade
369           Do not upgrade packages; when used in conjunction with install,
370           no-upgrade will prevent packages on the command line from being
371           upgraded if they are already installed. Configuration Item:
372           APT::Get::Upgrade.
373
374       --only-upgrade
375           Do not install new packages; when used in conjunction with install,
376           only-upgrade will install upgrades for already installed packages
377           only and ignore requests to install new packages. Configuration
378           Item: APT::Get::Only-Upgrade.
379
380       --allow-downgrades
381           This is a dangerous option that will cause apt to continue without
382           prompting if it is doing downgrades. It should not be used except
383           in very special situations. Using it can potentially destroy your
384           system! Configuration Item: APT::Get::allow-downgrades. Introduced
385           in APT 1.1.
386
387       --allow-remove-essential
388           Force yes; this is a dangerous option that will cause apt to
389           continue without prompting if it is removing essentials. It should
390           not be used except in very special situations. Using it can
391           potentially destroy your system! Configuration Item:
392           APT::Get::allow-remove-essential. Introduced in APT 1.1.
393
394       --allow-change-held-packages
395           Force yes; this is a dangerous option that will cause apt to
396           continue without prompting if it is changing held packages. It
397           should not be used except in very special situations. Using it can
398           potentially destroy your system! Configuration Item:
399           APT::Get::allow-change-held-packages. Introduced in APT 1.1.
400
401       --force-yes
402           Force yes; this is a dangerous option that will cause apt to
403           continue without prompting if it is doing something potentially
404           harmful. It should not be used except in very special situations.
405           Using force-yes can potentially destroy your system! Configuration
406           Item: APT::Get::force-yes. This is deprecated and replaced by
407           --allow-unauthenticated , --allow-downgrades ,
408           --allow-remove-essential , --allow-change-held-packages in 1.1.
409
410       --print-uris
411           Instead of fetching the files to install their URIs are printed.
412           Each URI will have the path, the destination file name, the size
413           and the expected MD5 hash. Note that the file name to write to will
414           not always match the file name on the remote site! This also works
415           with the source and update commands. When used with the update
416           command the MD5 and size are not included, and it is up to the user
417           to decompress any compressed files. Configuration Item:
418           APT::Get::Print-URIs.
419
420       --purge
421           Use purge instead of remove for anything that would be removed. An
422           asterisk ("*") will be displayed next to packages which are
423           scheduled to be purged.  remove --purge is equivalent to the purge
424           command. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Purge.
425
426       --reinstall
427           Re-install packages that are already installed and at the newest
428           version. Configuration Item: APT::Get::ReInstall.
429
430       --list-cleanup
431           This option is on by default; use --no-list-cleanup to turn it off.
432           When it is on, apt-get will automatically manage the contents of
433           /var/lib/apt/lists to ensure that obsolete files are erased. The
434           only reason to turn it off is if you frequently change your sources
435           list. Configuration Item: APT::Get::List-Cleanup.
436
437       -S, --snapshot
438           This option controls the snapshot chosen for archives with
439           Snapshot: enable in the source entry. For example, -S
440           20220102T030405Z selects a snapshot from January 2nd, 2022 at
441           03:04:05 UTC. Configuration Item: APT::Snapshot; see also the
442           sources.list(5) manual page.
443
444       -t, --target-release, --default-release
445           This option controls the default input to the policy engine; it
446           creates a default pin at priority 990 using the specified release
447           string. This overrides the general settings in
448           /etc/apt/preferences. Specifically pinned packages are not affected
449           by the value of this option. In short, this option lets you have
450           simple control over which distribution packages will be retrieved
451           from. Some common examples might be -t '2.1*', -t unstable or -t
452           sid. Configuration Item: APT::Default-Release; see also the
453           apt_preferences(5) manual page.
454
455       --trivial-only
456           Only perform operations that are 'trivial'. Logically this can be
457           considered related to --assume-yes; where --assume-yes will answer
458           yes to any prompt, --trivial-only will answer no. Configuration
459           Item: APT::Get::Trivial-Only.
460
461       --mark-auto
462           After successful installation, mark all freshly installed packages
463           as automatically installed, which will cause each of the packages
464           to be removed when no more manually installed packages depend on
465           this package. This is equally to running apt-mark auto for all
466           installed packages. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Mark-Auto.
467
468       --no-remove
469           If any packages are to be removed apt-get immediately aborts
470           without prompting. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Remove.
471
472       --auto-remove, --autoremove
473           If the command is either install or remove, then this option acts
474           like running the autoremove command, removing unused dependency
475           packages. Configuration Item: APT::Get::AutomaticRemove.
476
477       --only-source
478           Only has meaning for the source and build-dep commands. Indicates
479           that the given source names are not to be mapped through the binary
480           table. This means that if this option is specified, these commands
481           will only accept source package names as arguments, rather than
482           accepting binary package names and looking up the corresponding
483           source package. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Only-Source.
484
485       --diff-only, --dsc-only, --tar-only
486           Download only the diff, dsc, or tar file of a source archive.
487           Configuration Item: APT::Get::Diff-Only, APT::Get::Dsc-Only, and
488           APT::Get::Tar-Only.
489
490       --arch-only
491           Only process architecture-dependent build-dependencies.
492           Configuration Item: APT::Get::Arch-Only.
493
494       --indep-only
495           Only process architecture-independent build-dependencies.
496           Configuration Item: APT::Get::Indep-Only.
497
498       --allow-unauthenticated
499           Ignore if packages can't be authenticated and don't prompt about
500           it. This can be useful while working with local repositories, but
501           is a huge security risk if data authenticity isn't ensured in
502           another way by the user itself. The usage of the Trusted option for
503           sources.list(5) entries should usually be preferred over this
504           global override. Configuration Item:
505           APT::Get::AllowUnauthenticated.
506
507       --allow-insecure-repositories
508           Allow the update command to acquire unverifiable data from
509           configured sources. APT will otherwise fail at the update command
510           for repositories without valid cryptographically signatures. See
511           also apt-secure(8) for details on the concept and the implications.
512           Configuration Item: Acquire::AllowInsecureRepositories.
513
514       --allow-releaseinfo-change
515           Allow the update command to continue downloading data from a
516           repository which changed its information of the release contained
517           in the repository indicating e.g a new major release. APT will fail
518           at the update command for such repositories until the change is
519           confirmed to ensure the user is prepared for the change. See also
520           apt-secure(8) for details on the concept and configuration.
521
522           Specialist options (--allow-releaseinfo-change-field) exist to
523           allow changes only for certain fields like origin, label, codename,
524           suite, version and defaultpin. See also apt_preferences(5).
525           Configuration Item: Acquire::AllowReleaseInfoChange.
526
527       --show-progress
528           Show user friendly progress information in the terminal window when
529           packages are installed, upgraded or removed. For a machine parsable
530           version of this data see README.progress-reporting in the apt doc
531           directory. Configuration Items: Dpkg::Progress and
532           Dpkg::Progress-Fancy.
533
534       --with-source filename
535           Adds the given file as a source for metadata. Can be repeated to
536           add multiple files. See --with-source description in apt-cache(8)
537           for further details.
538
539       -eany, --error-on=any
540           Fail the update command if any error occured, even a transient one.
541
542       -U, --update
543           Run the update command before the specified command. This is
544           supported for commands installing, removing, or upgrading packages
545           such as install, remove, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade. This can be
546           useful to ensure a command always installs the latest versions, or,
547           in combination with the --snapshot option to make sure the snapshot
548           is present when install is being run.
549
550           Caveat: Due to technical limitations, locks are acquired
551           individually for each phase, hence an install may fail to acquire
552           locks after successfully executing the update. Until this is
553           resolved, this is merely syntactic sugar for apt update && apt
554           install
555
556       -h, --help
557           Show a short usage summary.
558
559       -v, --version
560           Show the program version.
561
562       -c, --config-file
563           Configuration File; Specify a configuration file to use. The
564           program will read the default configuration file and then this
565           configuration file. If configuration settings need to be set before
566           the default configuration files are parsed specify a file with the
567           APT_CONFIG environment variable. See apt.conf(5) for syntax
568           information.
569
570       -o, --option
571           Set a Configuration Option; This will set an arbitrary
572           configuration option. The syntax is -o Foo::Bar=bar.  -o and
573           --option can be used multiple times to set different options.
574

FILES

576       /etc/apt/sources.list
577           Locations to fetch packages from. Configuration Item:
578           Dir::Etc::SourceList.
579
580       /etc/apt/sources.list.d/
581           File fragments for locations to fetch packages from. Configuration
582           Item: Dir::Etc::SourceParts.
583
584       /etc/apt/apt.conf
585           APT configuration file. Configuration Item: Dir::Etc::Main.
586
587       /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/
588           APT configuration file fragments. Configuration Item:
589           Dir::Etc::Parts.
590
591       /etc/apt/preferences
592           Version preferences file. This is where you would specify
593           "pinning", i.e. a preference to get certain packages from a
594           separate source or from a different version of a distribution.
595           Configuration Item: Dir::Etc::Preferences.
596
597       /etc/apt/preferences.d/
598           File fragments for the version preferences. Configuration Item:
599           Dir::Etc::PreferencesParts.
600
601       /var/cache/apt/archives/
602           Storage area for retrieved package files. Configuration Item:
603           Dir::Cache::Archives.
604
605       /var/cache/apt/archives/partial/
606           Storage area for package files in transit. Configuration Item:
607           Dir::Cache::Archives (partial will be implicitly appended)
608
609       /var/lib/apt/lists/
610           Storage area for state information for each package resource
611           specified in sources.list(5) Configuration Item: Dir::State::Lists.
612
613       /var/lib/apt/lists/partial/
614           Storage area for state information in transit. Configuration Item:
615           Dir::State::Lists (partial will be implicitly appended)
616

SEE ALSO

618       apt-cache(8), apt-cdrom(8), dpkg(1), sources.list(5), apt.conf(5), apt-
619       patterns(7), apt-config(8), apt-secure(8), The APT User's guide in
620       /usr/share/doc/apt-doc/, apt_preferences(5), the APT Howto.
621

DIAGNOSTICS

623       apt-get returns zero on normal operation, decimal 100 on error.
624

BUGS

626       APT bug page[1]. If you wish to report a bug in APT, please see
627       /usr/share/doc/debian/bug-reporting.txt or the reportbug(1) command.
628

AUTHORS

630       Jason Gunthorpe
631
632       APT team
633

NOTES

635        1. APT bug page
636           http://bugs.debian.org/src:apt
637
638
639
640APT 2.7.6                        20 July 2023                       APT-GET(8)
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