apt-file -- APT package searching utility -- command-line interface
apt-file [
options] search
pattern
apt-file [
options] show
package
apt-file is a command line tool for searching files in packages for the
APT package management system.
Some actions are required to run the search:
- find
- Alias for search.
- list
- List the contents of a package. This action is very close
to the dpkg -L command except the package does not need to be
installed or fetched.
By default, the list action interprets its pattern as if
--fixed-string was specified.
- list-indices
- List the known Content indices and their status in a human
readable format. These indices can be searched via the -I option
(when enabled and after fetching the indices). The output is subject to
change without notice and is therefore unsuited for script usage /
automation.
For a machine-readable formats (e.g. automation), please use apt-config
dump (search for options starting with Acquire::IndexTargets)
and apt-get indextargets for checking the cache (Look for entries
with an Identifier field starting with Contents-).
Note that individual sources.list entries can override the global default.
Please consult sources.list(5) for more information on advanced
configuration of the sources.list files.
- search
- Search in which package a file is included. A list of all
packages containing the pattern pattern is returned.
Since Contents files does not contain directories, the pattern must match
(part of a) file name.
By default, the search action interprets its pattern as if
--substring-match was specified.
- show
- Alias for list.
- update
- This action that just calls apt update or apt-get
update (depending on whether a tty is available).
The only advantage using this over a regular apt update or apt-get
update directly is for the case where you have configured an apt-file
specific configuration (via the Dir::Etc::apt-file-main
configuration option). In that case, said configuration will be included
automatically.
The following options are available:
- -a, --architecture architecture[,...]
- This option is useful if you search a package for a
different architecture from the one installed on your system.
It can be a comma-separated list for searching on multiple
architectures.
- -c, --config-file APT config-file
- Configuration File; Specify a configuration file to use.
The program will read the default configuration file and then this
configuration file. If configuration settings need to be set before the
default configuration files are parsed specify a file with the
APT_CONFIG environment variable. See apt.conf(5) for syntax
information.
The configuration file will be read relative to when it appears on the
command line and can overwrite options that appear before it.
Note that the config file will also be passed to all APT tools called by
apt-file.
- -D, --from-deb
- Use contents of the given .deb archives(s) as patterns.
Useful for searching for file conflicts with other packages. Implies
-F.
- -f, --from-file
- Read patterns from the given file(s), one per line. Use -
as filename for stdin. If no files are given, then the list will be read
from stdin. This is much faster than invoking apt-file many times.
- --filter-origins origin[,...]
- Only search indices from the listed origins (e.g.
"Debian").
This filter matches against the name listed in the Origin field from
the Release file.
If set to '*', this filter will be disabled (mostly useful for overriding
the setting in a configuration file)
Alias of the APT config option: apt-file::Search-Filter::Origin
- --filter-suites suite[,...]
- Only search indices from the listed suites or codenames
(e.g. "unstable").
This filter matches against the name listed in the Codename and
Suite fields from the Release file. This means that either
"unstable" or "sid" will match Debian's unstable
suite.
If set to '*', this filter will be disabled (mostly useful for overriding
the setting in a configuration file)
Alias of the APT config option: apt-file::Search-Filter::Suite
- -F, --fixed-string
- Do not expand search pattern with generic characters at
pattern's start and end.
This is default for show and list actions.
- --index-names type[,...], -I type[,...]
- Only search indexes of the given name(s). If set to the
special value ALL (case-sensitive), then all apt-file
indices are searched.
The name(s) must match one or more of the identifiers used in the APT
configuration (minus leading "Contents-"). Example if the
configuration has the following snippets:
Acquire::IndexTargets::deb::Contents-deb { ... };
Acquire::IndexTargets::deb-src::Contents-dsc { ... };
Acquire::IndexTargets::deb::Contents-udeb { ... };
Acquire::IndexTargets::deb::Contents-deb-legacy {
# Explicitly named to "Contents-deb"
Identifier "Contents-deb";
...;
};
Then, apt-file will recognise "deb", "dsc" and
"udeb" as index names.
This option defaults to the value of the "apt-file::Index-Names"
apt config option (or "deb" if omitted).
- -i, --ignore-case
- Ignore case when searching for pattern.
- -l, --package-only
- Only display package name; do not display file names.
- --stream-results
-
This is a special-usage option useful for dealing with
searches that produce a high number of matches (10 000+) or/and
automated processing of results.
Disable deduplication logic and immediately emit a result when a match is
found.
This can greatly reduce the memory requirements for apt-file when processing
searches with many matches. It will also reduce the time until the first
match is emitted, which can be useful if matches can be processed as they
are discovered and the consumer can handle duplicated matches.
- -o, --option APT::Option=Value
- Set a Configuration Option; This will set an arbitrary
configuration option. The syntax is -o APT::Option=Value. -o
and --option can be used multiple times to set different options.
This option can be used to overwrite other command line options (e.g.
"-o apt-file::Search-Filter::Origin=Debian" is effectively the
same as "--filter-origins Debian").
Note that the config options passed via this option will also be passed to
all APT tools called by apt-file.
- --substring-match
- Match if the given search pattern is a substring of
a path or package.
This is default for search and find actions.
- -v, --verbose
- Run apt-file in verbose/debug mode.
- -x, --regexp
- Treat pattern as a (perl) regular expression. See
perlreref(1) for details. Without this option, pattern is treated
as a literal string to search for.
Be advised that this option can be rather slow. If performance is an issue,
consider giving apt-file non-regex pattern matching too much and pipe the
output to perl -ne '/<pattern-here>/'. This enables apt-file
to use more optimizations and leaves less work to the "slower"
regex.
- -h, --help
- Display a short help screen.
The apt-file command relies on the APT configuration. Notably, the default
configuration makes
apt fetch Contents files by default during a call
to
apt update.
For information on how to configure APT to fetch more or fewer Contents files,
please refer to
/usr/share/doc/apt-file/README.md.gz.
The following files are notably interesting:
- /etc/apt/apt-file.conf
- Note this path is actually configurable by changing the
value of the APT configuration called "Dir::Etc::apt-file-main".
The listed value is merely the default value of that option.
If this file is present, apt-file will read this file after
all default APT configuration files. Any config file -c or option (
-o) will be evaluated before this file (and can override
options set in it).
The file will also be passed on to all APT tools called by
apt-file.
- /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50apt-file.conf
- Chooses which Contents files to download. Note that
apt-file recognises only "Acquire" targets that starts with
"Contents-".
Here are some
apt-file 2 related work flows and how to (almost) emulate
them with
apt-file 3. They are documented as a
starting
point for people, who are attached to these.
The emulation may not be perfect for you out of the box. Patches are welcome to
keep the examples updated as long as the examples remain "trivial".
- •
- Only make apt-file update fetch Contents files
If you are accustomed to apt update not fetching Contents
files, then you can run
/usr/share/doc/apt-file/examples/apt-file-2-update.sh. This script
will configure apt and apt-file accordingly after best
effort.
Please read the resulting /etc/apt/apt-file.conf.
- •
- Creating/using "user" caches
Previous versions of apt-file had a "--cache" option, which
could be used to denote a directory to store the Contents files. This can
be emulated by doing:
# Setup
$ mkdir -p ~/.cache/apt-file ~/.config
$ touch ~/.cache/apt-file/dpkg-status
$ sed '/^Dir::State/ d; /^Dir::Cache/ d;' \
/usr/share/doc/apt-file/examples/apt-file.conf \
> ~/.config/apt-file.conf
$ cat <<EOF >> ~/.config/apt-file.conf
Dir::State "$HOME/.cache/apt-file";
Dir::Cache "$HOME/.cache/apt-file";
Dir::State::status "$HOME/.cache/apt-file/dpkg-status";
EOF
# Update the cache
$ apt-file -c ~/.config/apt-file.conf update
# Search using the cache
$ apt-file -c ~/.config/apt-file.conf show apt-file
# Removal of the cache + config
$ rm -fr ~/.cache/apt-file ~/.config/apt-file.conf
(You will probably want to add an alias apt-file in your ~/.bashrc)
Please read the resulting ./apt-file-user-cache.conf.
There are some known issues or "quirks" that are good to keep in mind.
- •
- The Contents files do not include a leading slash on
paths. This means that /bin/ls is listed as bin/ls in the
Contents file. If you are looking for something in a top-level directory,
it is often better to omit the leading slash.
The search algorithm will attempt to work around the leading slash, but it
will not work in all cases. As a workaround, try to pull the leading slash
to the beginning of regular expressions. For example, use
"/(?:usr/bin/vim|sbin/lvm)" instead of
"/usr/bin/vim|/sbin/lvm".
- •
- When a new line has been added to the sources.list and apt
update has not been run, apt-file does not print a warning message.
- •
- By default, apt-file assumes that Contents files do
not include a descriptive header (explaining what the file is and
how to interpret it). However, some tools have generated them with such a
header (e.g. for old versions of Contents files for the Debian archive or
Contents files generated by reprepro prior to version 5.2.0).
If you search such files, you will want to set
apt-file::Parser::Check-For-Description-Header to true (e.g. in
/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50apt-file.conf) to have apt-file
properly filter out the headers to avoid false matches.
The reason this is not the default is that it costs a factor 2 in overhead
while most common Contents files no longer have the header. (see #881405
for more details).
- •
- Not all APT repositories have Contents files. Notably
common install media (CDs etc.) may omit them to conserve space.
The default configuration by apt-file marks Contents files as
optional and will just silently fail to search in Contents files in such
repositories.
apt-file has the following defined exit codes, which can be used for
scripting purposes.
- 0
-
apt-file returned successfully. If the command was a
search, there was at least one result.
- 1
-
apt-file completed a search successfully, but it had
no results.
- 2
- An error occurred (including invalid/conflicting user
options).
- 3
-
apt-file could not complete the command because the
cache was empty. Please ensure there are indices enabled in the APT config
and run apt update to fetch them.
- 4
-
apt-file could not complete the command because the
cache does not have any files matching the restrictions. Either change the
restrictions (e.g. --index-names) or configure apt to fetch the
relevant files and run apt update.
- 255
- There was an internal errors / uncaught exception in
apt-file. Please file a bug against apt-file.
Any other exit code is reserved for future use.
apt(1),
apt-cache(8),
apt.conf(5)
The APT users guide in /usr/share/doc/apt/
The example config in /usr/share/doc/apt-file/examples
The README at
/usr/share/doc/apt-file/README.md.gz