bonjour,

En lisant le mail de Pierre L.

   je viens de tester la commande "apt" pour installer mes MAJ via ssh,

j'avais cru comprendre que apt était une commande interactive.

En réalité, si je tape "apt", j'obtiens:

   apt 1.6.1 (i386)
   Usage: apt [options] command

   apt is a commandline package manager and provides commands for
   searching and managing as well as querying information about packages.
   It provides the same functionality as the specialized APT tools,
   like apt-get and apt-cache, but enables options more suitable for
   interactive use by default.
   . . . . .

De plus, apt me donne des résultats incohérents:

==> apt upgrade
   Reading package lists...
   Building dependency tree...
   Reading state information...
   Calculating upgrade...
   The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer 
required:
     bdf2psf debian-zh-faq-s . . .
     libavahi-gobject0 . . .
     libestools2.4 . . .
     libgnome-2-0 . . .
     libgnomeui-0 . . .
     libllvm3.9 . . .
     libopencv-features2d2 . . .
     libopencv-ml2.4v5 . . .
     libopencv-ts2.4v5 . . .
     libruby2.3 . . .
     libtxc-dxtn-s2tc . . .
     manpages-fr-extra . . .
     vlc-plugin-video-splitter . . .

   Use 'apt autoremove' to remove them

==> apt autoremove
   Reading package lists...
   Building dependency tree...
   Reading state information...
   0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 2884 not upgraded.
   Reading package lists...
   Building dependency tree...
   Reading state information...
   0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 2884 not upgraded.

apt-get autoremove donne la même chose

Cordialement,
--
Pierre Frenkiel

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