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    Number of Packages?

    Hi,

    I have some 1549 packages installed and I would call myself a 'casual home user' .

    Out of interest:

    How many do you have

    Is there an absolute maximum and minimum

    What ones, that are installed by default, can safely be removed

    It seems to me that more and more apps are tied in to an ever growing family of packages (i.e modules) and that the term 'system bloat' springs to mind. That makes me shudder as Windoze is the leader in this field or so I thought.

    Thanks.

    Celeron CPU G1610@2.60GHz x 2
    GeForce 8400 GS/PCle/SSE2
    Kubuntu 14.04 - 64 bit Linux - KDE 4.13.0

    #2
    Re: Number of Packages?

    I have 1,365 packages, though this is a fairly new install. I never really get over 1600, though.

    There is no maximum, (aside from the size of your hard drive) but you do at least have to have the dependencies of ubuntu-minimal for a functioning linux install.

    What can be removed depends on your computer. I'd go through the applications menu and remove things I'll probably never use, if I were you.

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Number of Packages?

      Originally posted by leadwt
      Hi,

      I have some 1549 packages installed and I would call myself a 'casual home user' .

      Out of interest:

      How many do you have


      Thanks.

      I have 2,463 installed and counting ...... ....... I never seam to remove anything even if I no longer am using it......

      VINNY
      i7 4core HT 8MB L3 2.9GHz
      16GB RAM
      Nvidia GTX 860M 4GB RAM 1152 cuda cores

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Number of Packages?

        On an 8.04 install, I see 1572 installed. I'm pretty sloppy about keeping it clean, although I do tend to uninstall things that don't work. Hehe, actually it's been a while since I looked and there's 63 packages upgradable. Tut tut. I guess I should get on it. My problem is that I can't tell the difference between an upgraded and and un-upgraded package. Besides I don't normally reboot my machine so it could easily be a month or two before some of the "up"grades take effect.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Number of Packages?

          2,069

          And I try about everything except KitchenSink 1.0 and I'm constantly deleting and adding packages as I play with them. I did some house cleaning earlier today, so I may have removed a couple dozen ... stuff like "Factor", and older version of VirtualBox, some tar based packages, etc.

          That is one of the joys of Linux, especially Kubuntu and the huge repository. It's so easy to add and remove packages.
          "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
          – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Number of Packages?

            Whoa!

            You removed Factor? What kind of mysterious force did manipulate you?
            Multibooting: Kubuntu Noble 24.04
            Before: Jammy 22.04, Focal 20.04, Precise 12.04 Xenial 16.04 and Bionic 18.04
            Win XP, 7 & 10 sadly
            Using Linux since June, 2008

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Number of Packages?

              I'm going to install their upgrade!
              (Their first beta wouldn't compile to an ELF binary for me).
              "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
              – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Number of Packages?

                1.235 packages

                Originally posted by JontheEchidna
                There is no maximum, (aside from the size of your hard drive) but you do at least have to have the dependencies of ubuntu-minimal for a functioning linux install.
                That's not entirely true. Some dependencies of ubuntu-minimal are not needed for a functioning linux install, and some dependencies can be replaced by alternatives. But of course if one doesn't know which are essential, it's safer to make sure ubuntu-minimal is installed.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Re: Number of Packages?

                  From Top to Bottom

                  A tool:

                  /usr/share/doc/popularity-contest/README.gz
                  DEBIAN PACKAGE POPULARITY CONTEST - Avery Pennarun <*****>
                  =================================

                  This package contains a script, /usr/sbin/popularity-contest, which
                  generates a list of the packages installed on your system, in order of
                  most-recently-used to least-recently-used. The simplest way to use this
                  information is to help clean up your hard drive by removing unused packages.

                  For example,
                  popularity-contest | grep '<OLD>'
                  will show you a list of packages you haven't used in a while. Note that
                  this output isn't totally accurate: some packages appear "old" but you can't
                  remove them because other (non-old) packages depend on them. Shared library
                  packages are particularly bad this way because it's impossible to tell when
                  a library was last used.

                  The popularity-contest output looks like this:...
                  man popcon-largest-unused
                  popcon-largest-unused(8) popcon-largest-unused(8)

                  NAME
                  popcon-largest-unused - List size of unused packages

                  SYNTAX
                  popcon-largest-unused

                  DESCRIPTION
                  Based on the list of unused packages reported by popularity-contest, this program extract the package
                  size from the APT cache, and list the unused packages sorted by size.

                  FILES
                  /var/log/popularity-contest
                  Statistics > Ubuntu Popularity Contest


                  From Bottom to Top

                  Earlier > Topic: [SOLVED] Building a light KDE4 desktop for a netbook


                  Turning the "Recommended" off will help.

                  Recommended packages installed by default

                  In accordance with the Debian Policy Manual (which says "The 'Recommends' field should list packages that would be found together with this one in all but unusual installations"), the package management system now installs packages listed in the Recommends: field of other installed packages as well as Depends: by default. If you want to avoid this for specific packages, use apt-get --no-install-recommends; if you want to make this permanent, set APT::Install-Recommends "false"; in /etc/apt/apt.conf. Be aware that this may result in missing features in some programs.

                  (This change was made in Ubuntu 8.10.)
                  Before you edit, BACKUP !

                  Why there are dead links ?
                  1. Thread: Please explain how to access old kubuntu forum posts
                  2. Thread: Lost Information

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Re: Number of Packages?

                    1423 - and growing

                    apt-get (and synaptic) tell you if you have orphaned packages. In synaptic - it's Auto-removable and if you're in a terminal, sudo apt-get autoremove removes.

                    Please Read Me

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