On Sun, Feb 04, 2007 at 11:04:45PM -0500, cga2000 wrote: > Is there any way I can have debian help me figure out if there is stuff > that should be removed such as libraries that nothing uses -- naturally > I did not remove a single library myself. > > I ran "deborphan -z" but at a glance it looks like it does not add up to > more than 20-30Meg .. so I might as well leave well alone. You can try some additional search modifiers of deborphan. Excerpt from "man deborphan": -a, --all-packages Check all the packages, instead of only those in the libs section. Best used (if at all used) in combination with --priority. This option implies --show-section. -p, --priority=PRIORITY Show only those packages with a priority equal to, or greater than PRIORITY. PRIORITY may be in the range of 1-5, or one of required, important, standard, optional, extra. Default value for PRIORITY is 2 (important). But that's about all I can tell you about deborphan, since I haven't used it for a long time. Also debfoster2aptitude (provided by debfoster) might be of interest for you. debfoster2aptitude because debfoster is deprecated by aptitude, but this way you have can migrate your debfoster decision to aptitude. It can be run in interactive mode in a shell. It will then ask you question about the installed packages, whether you intend to keep them or to remove or purge them (default is to purge, but can be overridden by setting "RemoveCmd = apt-get remove" /etc/debfoster.conf) A closer look into the manpage of debfoster provides you with some more information on fine tuning the behaviour when deciding which packages to consider for its questioning, i.e.: debfoster2aptitude --option UseRecommends=no --mark-only will also try to purge packages which actually are only recommended by another installed package (by default debfoster considers recommended packages as real dependencies. And wouldn't purge immediately after finishing asking questions. This is only a little safety net. Important Notice!: Beware of the keys you press in interactive mode! Since it will be a long game of question and answer, and you definitely don't want to press "q" after answering 100+ questions. If you get tired of answering you can postpone the other questions by pressing "x", which will save your answers before exit. If you use apt-get, then "debfoster" is the command to use, but I'd really suggest using aptitude. This way you get aptitude to know which packages are really programs you want and which ones are dependencies, that can be removed, once there is no other package depending on it. Regards Marcus
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