What is the difference between sudo apt-get install and sudo apt install
I installed many packages from sudo apt-get install
but when I typed sudo apt --help
it gave a direct option of doing installation by sudo apt install [package name]
... So, what is the difference between the two ? are there any issues if I don't use 'get' along with 'apt'.
Solution 1:
Not much. apt
is a new command that supposed to merge several functions from apt-get
and apt-cache
into one command. It's still a little rough around the edges but here's the command listing from --help
:
Basic commands:
list - list packages based on package names
search - search in package descriptions
show - show package details
update - update list of available packages
install - install packages
remove - remove packages
upgrade - upgrade the system by installing/upgrading packages
full-upgrade - upgrade the system by removing/installing/upgrading packages
edit-sources - edit the source information file
The equivalent functions are designed to work in similar ways but it's not a proxy command (it's not calling the old ones - it's a new interface directly onto the Apt libraries) so there may be some edge-case changes.
There are also some obvious omissions (download
, policy
, etc) that power-users will miss and there are a whole raft of undocumented commands (purge
still works but I can't find anything on it).
16.04 Update: A lot of the omissions have now been included but aren't yet documented, nor do they have Bash-completions. It's a shame it's taking this long to implement functionality that already exists in the codebase but oh well. My advice is that if you're used to an apt-{get,cache}
command, try it on apt
. It might work.
There's also a DIFFERENCES TO APT-GET(8)
section in the man apt
page that's interesting:
The apt command is meant to be pleasant for end users and does
not need to be backward compatible like apt-get(8). Therefore
some options are different:
· The option DPkgPM::Progress-Fancy is enabled.
· The option APT::Color is enabled.
· A new list command is available similar to dpkg --list.
· The option upgrade has --with-new-pkgs enabled by default.
And if you want Bash-completions, I've had an attempt as writing a completions file for it already. These are included with later Ubuntu installs.