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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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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:
Assuming that programs are by default installed in
usr/bin
, I ranls -ltc | head -n 10
to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I foundhc
.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
add a comment |
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:
Assuming that programs are by default installed in
usr/bin
, I ranls -ltc | head -n 10
to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I foundhc
.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
add a comment |
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:
Assuming that programs are by default installed in
usr/bin
, I ranls -ltc | head -n 10
to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I foundhc
.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
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:
Assuming that programs are by default installed in
usr/bin
, I ranls -ltc | head -n 10
to find recenlty touched files there, and indeed I foundhc
.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
apt package-management dpkg
asked Apr 6 at 13:56
bleistift2bleistift2
1137
1137
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
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:
It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in
$PATH
environment variable:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin
So one can list all package files with
dpkg --list
(seeman dpkg
for details) and find files in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
,/usr/games
directories. So we can use the following command:$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
/usr/bin/hcSo we can see that
/usr/bin/hc
belongs to this package.List all man-pages:
$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
/usr/share/man/man1
/usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gzSo we can see that we can use
man hc
.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 $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %uAbout
Exec
see Desktop Entry Specification.For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:
and one will get the file list:
This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.
Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into somebin
directory?
– bleistift2
Apr 6 at 14:06
1
Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 14:17
2
Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.
– vanadium
Apr 6 at 15:11
@vanadium, you are right about$PATH
. Edited answer to include this approach.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 15:22
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
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:
It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in
$PATH
environment variable:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin
So one can list all package files with
dpkg --list
(seeman dpkg
for details) and find files in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
,/usr/games
directories. So we can use the following command:$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
/usr/bin/hcSo we can see that
/usr/bin/hc
belongs to this package.List all man-pages:
$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
/usr/share/man/man1
/usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gzSo we can see that we can use
man hc
.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 $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %uAbout
Exec
see Desktop Entry Specification.For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:
and one will get the file list:
This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.
Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into somebin
directory?
– bleistift2
Apr 6 at 14:06
1
Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 14:17
2
Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.
– vanadium
Apr 6 at 15:11
@vanadium, you are right about$PATH
. Edited answer to include this approach.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 15:22
add a comment |
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:
It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in
$PATH
environment variable:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin
So one can list all package files with
dpkg --list
(seeman dpkg
for details) and find files in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
,/usr/games
directories. So we can use the following command:$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
/usr/bin/hcSo we can see that
/usr/bin/hc
belongs to this package.List all man-pages:
$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
/usr/share/man/man1
/usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gzSo we can see that we can use
man hc
.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 $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %uAbout
Exec
see Desktop Entry Specification.For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:
and one will get the file list:
This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.
Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into somebin
directory?
– bleistift2
Apr 6 at 14:06
1
Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 14:17
2
Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.
– vanadium
Apr 6 at 15:11
@vanadium, you are right about$PATH
. Edited answer to include this approach.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 15:22
add a comment |
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:
It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in
$PATH
environment variable:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin
So one can list all package files with
dpkg --list
(seeman dpkg
for details) and find files in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
,/usr/games
directories. So we can use the following command:$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
/usr/bin/hcSo we can see that
/usr/bin/hc
belongs to this package.List all man-pages:
$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
/usr/share/man/man1
/usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gzSo we can see that we can use
man hc
.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 -- %uAbout
Exec
see Desktop Entry Specification.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:
and one will get the file list:
This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.
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:
It is known that executables are placed in the directories declared in
$PATH
environment variable:
$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/snap/bin
So one can list all package files with
dpkg --list
(seeman dpkg
for details) and find files in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
,/usr/games
directories. So we can use the following command:$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep -E "/bin/|/sbin/|/usr/games/"
/usr/bin/hcSo we can see that
/usr/bin/hc
belongs to this package.List all man-pages:
$ dpkg -L httpcode | grep "/man/"
/usr/share/man/man1
/usr/share/man/man1/hc.1.gzSo we can see that we can use
man hc
.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 $(dpkg -L telegram | grep ".desktop")
Exec=/opt/telegram/Telegram -- %uAbout
Exec
see Desktop Entry Specification.For not installed package one can visit https://packages.ubuntu.com and use Search package directories here (for all releases or for selected release), then click on list of files link in the right column of the table:
and one will get the file list:
This list may interpreted manually or by using searchbar in the browser.
edited Apr 6 at 15:20
answered Apr 6 at 14:04
N0rbertN0rbert
25.9k856122
25.9k856122
Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into somebin
directory?
– bleistift2
Apr 6 at 14:06
1
Yes, good-packaged application should conform Filesystem Hierarchy Standard, so its executables should be placed in/bin
,/sbin
,/usr/bin
,/usr/sbin
.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 14:17
2
Your executable has to be in one of the directories of the PATH, or it will not be found typing just the name of the executable in the terminal.
– vanadium
Apr 6 at 15:11
@vanadium, you are right about$PATH
. Edited answer to include this approach.
– N0rbert
Apr 6 at 15:22
add a comment |
Is your first solution always feasible, i.e. do package executables always go into somebin
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
add a comment |
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