dpkg-query (1)
Leading comments
dpkg manual page - dpkg-query(1)
Copyright © 2001 Wichert Akkerman <wakkerma@debian.org>
Copyright © 2006-2007 Frank Lichtenheld <djpig@debian.org>
Copyright © 2006-2015 Guillem Jover <guillem@debian.org>
Copyright © 2008-2011 Rapha\(:el Hertzog <hertzog@debian.org>
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later versi...
(The comments found at the beginning of the groff file "man1/dpkg-query.1".)
NAME
dpkg-query - a tool to query the dpkg database
SYNOPSIS
dpkg-query
[
option...]
command
DESCRIPTION
dpkg-query is a tool to show information about packages listed in
the
dpkg database.
COMMANDS
- -l, --list [package-name-pattern...]
-
List packages matching given pattern. If no package-name-pattern
is given, list all packages in /var/lib/dpkg/status, excluding
the ones marked as not-installed (i.e. those which have been previously
purged). Normal shell wildcard characters are allowed
in package-name-pattern. Please note you will probably have to
quote package-name-pattern to prevent the shell from performing
filename expansion. For example this will list all package names starting
with ``libc6'':
dpkg-query -l aqlibc6*aq
The first three columns of the output show the desired action, the package
status, and errors, in that order.
Desired action:
u = Unknown
i = Install
h = Hold
r = Remove
p = Purge
Package status:
n = Not-installed
c = Config-files
H = Half-installed
U = Unpacked
F = Half-configured
W = Triggers-awaiting
t = Triggers-pending
i = Installed
Error flags:
<empty> = (none)
R = Reinst-required
An uppercase status or error letter indicates the package is likely to
cause severe problems. Please refer to dpkg(1) for information
about the above states and flags.
The output format of this option is not configurable, but varies
automatically to fit the terminal width. It is intended for human
readers, and is not easily machine-readable. See -W (--show)
and --showformat for a way to configure the output format.
- -W, --show [package-name-pattern...]
-
Just like the --list option this will list all packages matching
the given pattern. However the output can be customized using the
--showformat option.
The default output format gives one line per matching package, each line
having the name (extended with the architecture qualifier for
Multi-Arch same packages) and installed version of the package,
separated by a tab.
- -s, --status package-name...
-
Report status of specified package. This just displays the entry in
the installed package status database. When multiple package-name
are listed, the requested status entries are separated by an empty line,
with the same order as specified on the argument list.
- -L, --listfiles package-name...
-
List files installed to your system from package-name. When multiple
package-name are listed, the requested lists of files are separated
by an empty line, with the same order as specified on the argument list.
However, note that files created by package-specific installation-scripts
are not listed.
- --control-list package-name
-
List control files installed to your system from package-name
(since dpkg 1.16.5).
These can be used as input arguments to --control-show.
- --control-show package-name control-file
-
Print the control-file installed to your system from package-name
to the standard output (since dpkg 1.16.5).
- -c, --control-path package-name [control-file]
-
List paths for control files installed to your system from package-name
(since dpkg 1.15.4).
If control-file is specified then only list the path for that control
file if it is present.
Warning: this command is deprecated as it gives direct access to the
internal dpkg database, please switch to use --control-list and
--control-show instead for all cases where those commands might
give the same end result. Although, as long as there is still at least
one case where this command is needed (i.e. when having to remove a
damaging postrm maintainer script), and while there is no good solution
for that, this command will not get removed.
- -S, --search filename-search-pattern...
-
Search for packages that own files corresponding to the given pattern.
Standard shell wildcard characters can be used in the pattern, where
asterisk (*) and question mark (?) will match a slash, and blackslash
(\) will be used as an escape character.
If the first character in the filename-search-pattern is none of
oq*[?/cq then it will be considered a substring match and will be
implicitly surrounded by oq*cq (as in
*filename-search-pattern*).
If the subsequent string contains any of oq*[?\cq, then it will
handled like a glob pattern, otherwise any trailing oq/cq or
oq/.cq will be removed and a literal path lookup will be performed.
This command will not list extra files created by maintainer scripts,
nor will it list alternatives.
- -p, --print-avail package-name...
-
Display details about package-name, as found in
/var/lib/dpkg/available. When multiple package-name are
listed, the requested available entries are separated by an empty
line, with the same order as specified on the argument list.
Users of APT-based frontends
should use apt-cache show package-name instead
as the available file is only kept up-to-date when
using dselect.
- -?, --help
-
Show the usage message and exit.
- --version
-
Show the version and exit.
OPTIONS
- --admindir=dir
-
Change the location of the dpkg database. The default location is
/var/lib/dpkg.
- --load-avail
-
Also load the available file when using the --show and --list
commands, which now default to only querying the status file
(since dpkg 1.16.2).
- -f, --showformat=format
-
This option is used to specify the format of the output --show
will produce. The format is a string that will be output for each package
listed.
In the format string, lq\rq introduces escapes:
\n newline
\r carriage return
\t tab
lq\rq before any other character suppresses any special
meaning of the following character, which is useful for lq\rq
and lq$rq.
Package information can be included by inserting
variable references to package fields using the syntax
lq${field[;width]}rq. Fields are
printed right-aligned unless the width is negative in which case left
alignment will be used. The following fields are recognized but
they are not necessarily available in the status file (only internal
fields or fields stored in the binary package end up in it):
Architecture
Bugs
Conffiles (internal)
Config-Version (internal)
Conflicts
Breaks
Depends
Description
Enhances
Essential
Filename (internal, front-end related)
Homepage
Installed-Size
MD5sum (internal, front-end related)
MSDOS-Filename (internal, front-end related)
Maintainer
Origin
Package
Pre-Depends
Priority
Provides
Recommends
Replaces
Revision (obsolete)
Section
Size (internal, front-end related)
Source
Status (internal)
Suggests
Tag (usually not in .deb but in repository Packages files)
Triggers-Awaited (internal)
Triggers-Pending (internal)
Version
The following are virtual fields, generated by dpkg-query from
values from other fields (note that these do not use valid names for
fields in control files):
-
- binary:Package
-
It contains the binary package name with a possible architecture qualifier
like lqlibc6:amd64rq (since dpkg 1.16.2).
An architecture qualifier will be present to make the package name unambiguous,
for example if the package has a Multi-Arch field with a value of
same or the package is of a foreign architecture.
- binary:Summary
-
It contains the package short description (since dpkg 1.16.2).
- db:Status-Abbrev
-
It contains the abbreviated package status, such as lqiirq
(since dpkg 1.16.2).
- db:Status-Want
-
It contains the package wanted status, part of the Status field
(since dpkg 1.17.11).
- db:Status-Status
-
It contains the package status word, part of the Status field
(since dpkg 1.17.11).
- db:Status-Eflag
-
It contains the package status error flag, part of the Status field
(since dpkg 1.17.11).
- source:Package
-
It contains the source package name for this binary package
(since dpkg 1.16.2).
- source:Version
-
It contains the source package version for this binary package
(since dpkg 1.16.2)
-
The default format string is lq${binary:Package}\t${Version}\nrq.
Actually, all other fields found in the status file (i.e. user defined
fields) can be requested, too. They will be printed as-is, though, no
conversion nor error checking is done on them. To get the name of the
dpkg maintainer and the installed version, you could run:
dpkg-query -W -f=aq${binary:Package} ${Version}\t${Maintainer}\naq dpkg
EXIT STATUS
- 0
-
The requested query was successfully performed.
- 1
-
Problems were encountered while parsing the command line or performing the
query, including no file or package being found (except for
--control-path).
ENVIRONMENT
- DPKG_ADMINDIR
-
If set and the --admindir option has not been specified, it will
be used as the dpkg data directory.
- COLUMNS
-
This setting influences the output of the --list option by changing
the width of its output.
SEE ALSO
dpkg(1).