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What is the "standard system" Package called?
What is the "standard system" Package called?
That have ftp,telnet, lspci and exim in and so on called? I did a netinst but I chose with out network card. but sems it did't insall all standard system tools.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Within Aptitude's graphical interface, the Tasks section lists the meta-packages offered during installation. I couldn't find the one you're looking for, though.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
I wondered about that to. I just did a minimal netinst then ran 'tasksel' by hand - after I had rebooted to check my system worked.
tasksel didn't show 'standard system' like you get from the installer.
After reading the tasksel man page just now, and looking at /usr/share/tasksel/debian-tasks.desc, it is possible that "tasksel install standard" will do the job, I haven't tried it though.
[edit]
Added later...
Running "tasksel --new-install" makes the "Standard system utilities" option appear.
tasksel didn't show 'standard system' like you get from the installer.
After reading the tasksel man page just now, and looking at /usr/share/tasksel/debian-tasks.desc, it is possible that "tasksel install standard" will do the job, I haven't tried it though.
[edit]
Added later...
Running "tasksel --new-install" makes the "Standard system utilities" option appear.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
and playing around a bit more gives me the fact that the "standard" package consists of:
which leads to:
so the equivalent, without using tasksel, would be:
Code: Select all
tasksel -t --new-install --task-packages standard
~pstandard
~prequired
~pimportant
Code: Select all
aptitude search ~pstandard -F"%p"
apt-listchanges
at
bash-completion
bc
bind9-host
bsd-mailx
dc
debian-faq
dnsutils
doc-debian
doc-linux-text
exim4
exim4-base
exim4-config
exim4-daemon-light
file
ftp
gettext-base
less
libbind9-50
libc6-i386
libcap2
libdb4.5
libdb4.6
libdb4.7
libdb4.8
libdns50
libedit2
libevent-1.4-2
libevent2
libgc1c2
libgcrypt11
libgnutls26
libgpg-error0
libgpm2
libgssapi-krb5-2
libgssglue1
libgssrpc4
libidn11
libisc50
libk5crypto3
libkadm5clnt6
libkadm5srv6
libkdb5-4
libkeyutils1
libkrb5-3
libkrb5support0
libldap-2.4-2
liblockfile1
liblwres50
libmagic1
libnfsidmap2
libpci3
libpcre3
librpcsecgss3
libsasl2-2
libsqlite3-0
libunwind7-dev
libxml2
locales
lsof
m4
mime-support
mlocate
mutt
ncurses-term
nfs-common
openssh-client
patch
pciutils
perl
perl-modules
portmap
procmail
python
python-central
python-minimal
python-reportbug
python2.5
python2.5-minimal
reportbug
sidux-archive-keyring
sidux-keyring
sidux-keyrings
tcpd
telnet
texinfo
time
ucf
w3m
wamerican
whois
Code: Select all
aptitude search ~prequired -F"%p"
base-files
base-passwd
bash
bsdutils
coreutils
debconf
debconf-i18n
debianutils
diffutils
dpkg
e2fslibs
e2fsprogs
findutils
gcc-4.2-base
gcc-4.3-base
gcc-4.4-base
grep
gzip
hostname
initscripts
libacl1
libattr1
libblkid1
libc-bin
libc6
libcomerr2
libdevmapper1.02.1
libgcc1
liblocale-gettext-perl
libncurses5
libpam-modules
libpam-runtime
libpam0g
libselinux1
libsepol1
libslang2
libss2
libstdc++6
libtext-charwidth-perl
libtext-iconv-perl
libtext-wrapi18n-perl
libunwind7
libuuid1
libvolume-id1
login
lsb-base
lzma
mawk
mount
ncurses-base
ncurses-bin
passwd
perl-base
procps
sed
sensible-utils
sysv-rc
sysvinit
sysvinit-utils
tar
tzdata
util-linux
zlib1g
Code: Select all
aptitude search ~pimportant -F"%p"
adduser
apt
apt-utils
aptitude
bsdmainutils
cpio
cron
debian-archive-keyring
debian-backports-keyring
debian-multimedia-keyring
dhcp3-client
dhcp3-common
dmidecode
ed
gnupg
gpgv
groff-base
ifupdown
info
install-info
iproute
iptables
iputils-ping
isc-dhcp-client
isc-dhcp-common
libbz2-1.0
libcwidget3
libept0
libgdbm3
libncursesw5
libnewt0.52
libpopt0
libreadline5
libreadline6
libsigc++-2.0-0c2a
libssl0.9.8
libtasn1-3
libusb-0.1-4
libwrap0
libxapian15
logrotate
man-db
manpages
module-init-tools
nano
net-tools
netbase
netcat-traditional
readline-common
rsyslog
tasksel
tasksel-data
traceroute
udev
vim-common
vim-tiny
wget
whiptail
Code: Select all
#aptitude install ~pstandard ~pimportant ~prequired
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
I have sidux repos in my sources.list, which is why some of those packages showed up (in case anyone is wondering). I could remove the repo, but they may come in handy (I don't actually have anything from there installed at the moment, other than the keyring files)
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
This intrigues me, do I understand correctly, that at some point prior to the "tasksel" part of the install you rebooted to a working install. Then ran tasksel --new-install from your running new base install?Tixy wrote:I wondered about that to. I just did a minimal netinst then ran 'tasksel' by hand - after I had rebooted to check my system worked.
tasksel didn't show 'standard system' like you get from the installer.
Cheers
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
My guess would be that he unselected the "Standard system utilities" package (along with everything else). Which would mean that he would get the "required" ones (since I assume they're part of the core system). Not sure if he'd get "important" or not. Maybe just some of them.
The default install (graphical desktop + Standard utils) would use the following command:
The default install (graphical desktop + Standard utils) would use the following command:
Code: Select all
aptitude -q -y install ~t^desktop$ ~t^gnome-desktop$ ~pstandard ~prequired ~pimportant
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
I usaly get this package too "openbsd-inetd" too did't find it in your lists. I chose standard system it was my only chose on netinst for when I did the install with no network drivers.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
I did a reinstall and only chose "standard system" from the dvd.iso and now I got "openbsd-inetd" too. All sems to be fine. from now on I think I stick with dvd releases insted so i get less problems. with missing package's that do not get installed even if they are needed for like stuff like pure-ftpd-mysql.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Correct, I unselected everything in Tasksel during installation, so it would then just put Grub on my disk and finish.bugsbunny wrote:My guess would be that he unselected the "Standard system utilities" package (along with everything else).
I had had problems with partitioning and I didn't want to waste time and money installing a full desktop setup if it was going to be broken.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Just for the record: I have installed various Testing systems without selecting any task and all the packages marked as Important and Required are installed automatically, but only a pair of the ones marked as Standard are.
If you install gnome-core without recommended packages, it pulls about a half of the Standard packages.
If you install gnome-core without recommended packages, it pulls about a half of the Standard packages.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
There is a way to get package priority listed in the aptitude visual interface.
It might remind one a bit of dselect, although can be really handy if downgrading
or checking depends.
open aptitude
type G
which opens
"Enter the new package grouping mechanism for this display" box
scroll to the end of the line [...] ,section(topdir)
and add ,priority
{...],section(topdir),priority
then open the package view as normal .
If you use the visual interface enough you will learn visually
which sections include the standard packages.
Much the same (although not equal to) the way bugsbunny demonstrated above,
how to check from the commandline..
It might remind one a bit of dselect, although can be really handy if downgrading
or checking depends.
open aptitude
type G
which opens
"Enter the new package grouping mechanism for this display" box
scroll to the end of the line [...] ,section(topdir)
and add ,priority
{...],section(topdir),priority
then open the package view as normal .
If you use the visual interface enough you will learn visually
which sections include the standard packages.
Much the same (although not equal to) the way bugsbunny demonstrated above,
how to check from the commandline..
In memory of Ian Ashley Murdock (1973 - 2015) founder of the Debian project.
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Ok, I can generate the list I need using (for example)
But how do I send it to apt-get? I guess I need to pipe it or something...
Code: Select all
tasksel --task-packages standard
- Head_on_a_Stick
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Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Code: Select all
# apt install $(tasksel --task-packages standard)
deadbang
Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
Thank you!Head_on_a_Stick wrote:Code: Select all
# apt install $(tasksel --task-packages standard)
- Head_on_a_Stick
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Re: What is the "standard system" Package called?
You're welcome
I think you can do it directly with aptitude(8) as well, judging by @bugsbunny's posts earlier in the thread:
I think you can do it directly with aptitude(8) as well, judging by @bugsbunny's posts earlier in the thread:
Code: Select all
# aptitude install ~pstandard
deadbang