APT-RDEPENDS(8) APT-RDEPENDS(8)
NAME
apt-rdepends - performs recursive dependency listings similar to apt-cache
SYNOPSIS
apt-rdepends [options] [pkgs ...]
DESCRIPTION
apt-rdepends searches through the APT cache to find package dependencies. apt-rdepends
knows how to emulate the
result of calling apt-cache with both depends and dotty options.
By default, apt-rdepends shows a listing of each dependency a package has. It
will also look at each of these
fulfilling packages, and recursively lists their dependencies.
OPTIONS
-b, --build-depends
Show build dependencies instead of normal package dependencies.
-d, --dotty
dotty takes a list of packages on the command line and generates output suitable
for use by springgraph.
The result will be a set of nodes and edges representing the relationships
between the packages. By
default the given packages will trace out all dependent packages which can
produce a very large graph.
Blue lines are pre-depends, green lines are conflicts, yellow lines are
suggests, orange lines are recomā
mends, red lines are replaces, and black lines are depends.
Caution, dotty cannot graph larger sets of packages.
-p, --print-state
Shows the state of each dependency after each package version. See
--state-follow and --state-show for
why this is useful.
-r, --reverse
Shows the listings of each package that depends on a package. Furthermore, it
will look at these depenā
dent packages, and find their dependers.
-f, --follow=DEPENDS
A comma-separated list of DEPENDS types to follow recursively. By default, it
only follows the Depends
and PreDepends types.
The possible values for DEPENDS are: Depends, PreDepends, Suggests, Recommends,
Conflicts, Replaces, and
Obsoletes.
In --build-depends mode, the possible values are: Build-Depends, Build-Depends-Indep,
Build-Conflicts,
Build-Conflicts-Indep.
-s, --show=DEPENDS
A comma-separated list of DEPENDS types to show, when displaying a listing. By
default, it only shows the
Depends and PreDepends types.
--state-follow=STATES
--state-show=STATES
These two options are similar to --follow and --show. They both deal with the
current state of a package.
By default, the value of STATES is Unknown, NotInstalled, UnPacked,
HalfConfigured, HalfInstalled, Configā
Files, and Installed.
These options are useful, if you only want to only look at the dependencies
between the Installed packages
on your system. You can then call:
apt-rdepends --state-follow=Installed libfoo
Or if you want to only show the packages installed on your system:
apt-rdepends --state-follow=Installed --state-show=Installed libfoo
pkgs The list of packages on which to discover dependencies.
-v, --vcg, --xvcg
This option takes a list of packages on the command line and generates output
suitable for use by xvcg.
The result will be a set of nodes and edges representing the relationships
between the packages. By
default the given packages will trace out all dependent packages which can
produce a very large graph.
Blue lines are pre-depends, green lines are conflicts, yellow lines are
suggests, orange lines are recomā
mends, red lines are replaces, and black lines are depends.
SEE ALSO
apt.conf(5), sources.list(5), apt-cache(8), AptPkg(3)
BUGS
apt-rdepends does not emulate apt-cache perfectly. It does not display
information about virtual packages, nor
does it know about virtual packages when it is in reverse dependency mode.
apt-rdepends also does not know how to stop after a certain depth has been
reached.
apt-rdepends cannot do reverse build-dependencies. This is really difficult,
since it would have to load the --state-follow=STATES
--state-show=STATES
These two options are similar to --follow and --show. They both deal with the
current state of a package.
By default, the value of STATES is Unknown, NotInstalled, UnPacked,
HalfConfigured, HalfInstalled, Configā
Files, and Installed.
These options are useful, if you only want to only look at the dependencies
between the Installed packages
on your system. You can then call:
apt-rdepends --state-follow=Installed libfoo
Or if you want to only show the packages installed on your system:
apt-rdepends --state-follow=Installed --state-show=Installed libfoo
pkgs The list of packages on which to discover dependencies.
-v, --vcg, --xvcg
This option takes a list of packages on the command line and generates output
suitable for use by xvcg.
The result will be a set of nodes and edges representing the relationships
between the packages. By
default the given packages will trace out all dependent packages which can
produce a very large graph.
Blue lines are pre-depends, green lines are conflicts, yellow lines are
suggests, orange lines are recomā
mends, red lines are replaces, and black lines are depends.
SEE ALSO
apt.conf(5), sources.list(5), apt-cache(8), AptPkg(3)
BUGS
apt-rdepends does not emulate apt-cache perfectly. It does not display
information about virtual packages, nor
does it know about virtual packages when it is in reverse dependency mode.
apt-rdepends also does not know how to stop after a certain depth has been
reached.
apt-rdepends cannot do reverse build-dependencies. This is really difficult,
since it would have to load the
whole cache into memory before discovering which packages depend on others to
build.
apt-rdepends exists. This functionality should really reside in apt-cache
itself.
AUTHOR
apt-rdepends was written by Simon Law <[email protected]>
1.3.0 2005-09-21 APT-RDEPENDS(8)