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How to find program name(s) of an installed package?



Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraHow to know if a package is graphical or command line application?apt changelog for to-be installed packagesFind what package supplied a tool / application in Ubuntu 11.10Can I manage dpkg-installed package with apt-get?Half installed package nightmareReinstall all dependancies of a single packageHow to check if a virtual package is installed?Replace apt package with compiled versHow to find out how a program was removed?How to find exact program name of installed program using terminal?dpkg: error processing package sendmail-base



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5















When I have installed a package using apt, is there a way to find out by which command(s) I can run the installed program(s)?



For instance, the package httpcode is not available as httpcode, and the package description (apt show httpcode) does not explain how to run it. How could I have found out that it’s run via hc from the command line?



There are two slightly hacky workarounds I found:



  1. Assuming that programs are by default installed in usr/bin, I ran ls -ltc | head -n 10 to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I found hc.


  2. Similarly to 1, dpkg -L httpcode returns a list of files created by installing the package, which also lists /usr/bin/hc.


Is there a better solution to this problem that doesn’t hinge upon the intuition of where the program might be stored on disk?



I also found that man httpcode does open the man page of the program, even though I called it with the package name as argument. Does this always work (if the program provides a manpage)?










share|improve this question




























    5















    When I have installed a package using apt, is there a way to find out by which command(s) I can run the installed program(s)?



    For instance, the package httpcode is not available as httpcode, and the package description (apt show httpcode) does not explain how to run it. How could I have found out that it’s run via hc from the command line?



    There are two slightly hacky workarounds I found:



    1. Assuming that programs are by default installed in usr/bin, I ran ls -ltc | head -n 10 to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I found hc.


    2. Similarly to 1, dpkg -L httpcode returns a list of files created by installing the package, which also lists /usr/bin/hc.


    Is there a better solution to this problem that doesn’t hinge upon the intuition of where the program might be stored on disk?



    I also found that man httpcode does open the man page of the program, even though I called it with the package name as argument. Does this always work (if the program provides a manpage)?










    share|improve this question
























      5












      5








      5


      1






      When I have installed a package using apt, is there a way to find out by which command(s) I can run the installed program(s)?



      For instance, the package httpcode is not available as httpcode, and the package description (apt show httpcode) does not explain how to run it. How could I have found out that it’s run via hc from the command line?



      There are two slightly hacky workarounds I found:



      1. Assuming that programs are by default installed in usr/bin, I ran ls -ltc | head -n 10 to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I found hc.


      2. Similarly to 1, dpkg -L httpcode returns a list of files created by installing the package, which also lists /usr/bin/hc.


      Is there a better solution to this problem that doesn’t hinge upon the intuition of where the program might be stored on disk?



      I also found that man httpcode does open the man page of the program, even though I called it with the package name as argument. Does this always work (if the program provides a manpage)?










      share|improve this question














      When I have installed a package using apt, is there a way to find out by which command(s) I can run the installed program(s)?



      For instance, the package httpcode is not available as httpcode, and the package description (apt show httpcode) does not explain how to run it. How could I have found out that it’s run via hc from the command line?



      There are two slightly hacky workarounds I found:



      1. Assuming that programs are by default installed in usr/bin, I ran ls -ltc | head -n 10 to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I found hc.


      2. Similarly to 1, dpkg -L httpcode returns a list of files created by installing the package, which also lists /usr/bin/hc.


      Is there a better solution to this problem that doesn’t hinge upon the intuition of where the program might be stored on disk?



      I also found that man httpcode does open the man page of the program, even though I called it with the package name as argument. Does this always work (if the program provides a manpage)?







      apt package-management dpkg






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Apr 6 at 13:56









      bleistift2bleistift2

      1137




      1137




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          9














          The locations of files (executables, man-pages and other stuff) should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard as a rule.



          Personally I solve this problem with one of four methods:




          1. It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in $PATH environment variable:




            $ echo $PATH
            /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin




            So one can list all package files with dpkg --list (see man dpkg for details) and find files in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, /usr/games directories. So we can use the following command:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
            /usr/bin/hc



            So we can see that /usr/bin/hc belongs to this package.




          2. List all man-pages:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
            /usr/share/man/man1
            /usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gz



            So we can see that we can use man hc.




          3. For applications with GUI I run search for *.desktop files.




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep ".desktop"
            $



            In this particular case it will not return anything.



            With some complicated proprietary (or bad-packaged) stuff this method transforms to reading Exec variable in the *.desktop file - here Telegram is an example:




             $ dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop"
            /usr/share/applications/telegram.desktop

            $ grep Exec $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
            Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %u



            About Exec see Desktop Entry Specification.




          4. For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:




            list of files link




            and one will get the file list:




            list of files for httpcode package




            This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.







          share|improve this answer

























          • Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

            – bleistift2
            Apr 6 at 14:06






          • 1





            Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 14:17






          • 2





            Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

            – vanadium
            Apr 6 at 15:11











          • @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 15:22











          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          9














          The locations of files (executables, man-pages and other stuff) should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard as a rule.



          Personally I solve this problem with one of four methods:




          1. It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in $PATH environment variable:




            $ echo $PATH
            /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin




            So one can list all package files with dpkg --list (see man dpkg for details) and find files in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, /usr/games directories. So we can use the following command:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
            /usr/bin/hc



            So we can see that /usr/bin/hc belongs to this package.




          2. List all man-pages:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
            /usr/share/man/man1
            /usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gz



            So we can see that we can use man hc.




          3. For applications with GUI I run search for *.desktop files.




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep ".desktop"
            $



            In this particular case it will not return anything.



            With some complicated proprietary (or bad-packaged) stuff this method transforms to reading Exec variable in the *.desktop file - here Telegram is an example:




             $ dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop"
            /usr/share/applications/telegram.desktop

            $ grep Exec $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
            Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %u



            About Exec see Desktop Entry Specification.




          4. For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:




            list of files link




            and one will get the file list:




            list of files for httpcode package




            This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.







          share|improve this answer

























          • Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

            – bleistift2
            Apr 6 at 14:06






          • 1





            Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 14:17






          • 2





            Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

            – vanadium
            Apr 6 at 15:11











          • @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 15:22















          9














          The locations of files (executables, man-pages and other stuff) should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard as a rule.



          Personally I solve this problem with one of four methods:




          1. It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in $PATH environment variable:




            $ echo $PATH
            /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin




            So one can list all package files with dpkg --list (see man dpkg for details) and find files in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, /usr/games directories. So we can use the following command:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
            /usr/bin/hc



            So we can see that /usr/bin/hc belongs to this package.




          2. List all man-pages:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
            /usr/share/man/man1
            /usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gz



            So we can see that we can use man hc.




          3. For applications with GUI I run search for *.desktop files.




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep ".desktop"
            $



            In this particular case it will not return anything.



            With some complicated proprietary (or bad-packaged) stuff this method transforms to reading Exec variable in the *.desktop file - here Telegram is an example:




             $ dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop"
            /usr/share/applications/telegram.desktop

            $ grep Exec $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
            Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %u



            About Exec see Desktop Entry Specification.




          4. For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:




            list of files link




            and one will get the file list:




            list of files for httpcode package




            This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.







          share|improve this answer

























          • Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

            – bleistift2
            Apr 6 at 14:06






          • 1





            Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 14:17






          • 2





            Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

            – vanadium
            Apr 6 at 15:11











          • @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 15:22













          9












          9








          9







          The locations of files (executables, man-pages and other stuff) should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard as a rule.



          Personally I solve this problem with one of four methods:




          1. It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in $PATH environment variable:




            $ echo $PATH
            /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin




            So one can list all package files with dpkg --list (see man dpkg for details) and find files in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, /usr/games directories. So we can use the following command:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
            /usr/bin/hc



            So we can see that /usr/bin/hc belongs to this package.




          2. List all man-pages:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
            /usr/share/man/man1
            /usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gz



            So we can see that we can use man hc.




          3. For applications with GUI I run search for *.desktop files.




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep ".desktop"
            $



            In this particular case it will not return anything.



            With some complicated proprietary (or bad-packaged) stuff this method transforms to reading Exec variable in the *.desktop file - here Telegram is an example:




             $ dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop"
            /usr/share/applications/telegram.desktop

            $ grep Exec $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
            Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %u



            About Exec see Desktop Entry Specification.




          4. For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:




            list of files link




            and one will get the file list:




            list of files for httpcode package




            This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.







          share|improve this answer















          The locations of files (executables, man-pages and other stuff) should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard as a rule.



          Personally I solve this problem with one of four methods:




          1. It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in $PATH environment variable:




            $ echo $PATH
            /usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin




            So one can list all package files with dpkg --list (see man dpkg for details) and find files in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin, /usr/games directories. So we can use the following command:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
            /usr/bin/hc



            So we can see that /usr/bin/hc belongs to this package.




          2. List all man-pages:




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
            /usr/share/man/man1
            /usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gz



            So we can see that we can use man hc.




          3. For applications with GUI I run search for *.desktop files.




            $ dpkg -L httpcode | grep ".desktop"
            $



            In this particular case it will not return anything.



            With some complicated proprietary (or bad-packaged) stuff this method transforms to reading Exec variable in the *.desktop file - here Telegram is an example:




             $ dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop"
            /usr/share/applications/telegram.desktop

            $ grep Exec $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
            Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %u



            About Exec see Desktop Entry Specification.




          4. For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:




            list of files link




            and one will get the file list:




            list of files for httpcode package




            This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 6 at 15:20

























          answered Apr 6 at 14:04









          N0rbertN0rbert

          25.9k856122




          25.9k856122












          • Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

            – bleistift2
            Apr 6 at 14:06






          • 1





            Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 14:17






          • 2





            Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

            – vanadium
            Apr 6 at 15:11











          • @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 15:22

















          • Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

            – bleistift2
            Apr 6 at 14:06






          • 1





            Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 14:17






          • 2





            Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

            – vanadium
            Apr 6 at 15:11











          • @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

            – N0rbert
            Apr 6 at 15:22
















          Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

          – bleistift2
          Apr 6 at 14:06





          Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into some bin directory?

          – bleistift2
          Apr 6 at 14:06




          1




          1





          Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

          – N0rbert
          Apr 6 at 14:17





          Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, /usr/sbin.

          – N0rbert
          Apr 6 at 14:17




          2




          2





          Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

          – vanadium
          Apr 6 at 15:11





          Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.

          – vanadium
          Apr 6 at 15:11













          @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

          – N0rbert
          Apr 6 at 15:22





          @vanadium, you are right about $PATH. Edited answer to include this approach.

          – N0rbert
          Apr 6 at 15:22

















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