On Saturday 27 September 2003 2:18 am, Terry Hancock wrote: > On Friday 26 September 2003 10:29 am, Pigeon wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 26, 2003 at 02:52:12AM -0700, Paul Johnson wrote: > > > On Sat, Sep 27, 2003 at 08:26:32AM +1200, cr wrote: > > > > I appreciate that dselect is only part of the install process, albeit > > > > the largest part timewise if one uses it. > > > > > > You don't have to, though. > > > > Yeah, but what are the choices? > > > > Run tasksel (y/n)? (frequently too coarse) > > Run dselect (y/n)? (we all know about this one :-) ) > > Do it by hand afterwards - somewhat inconvenient and daunting for a > > new user > > Yeah, I agree that dselect is awful (to be fair, it probably wasn't so bad > when there were fewer packages to wade through). I have stopped > using it, myself. > > I recommend using "tasksel" to rough out the system, then using apt-get > to finish the job. The tasksel will give you a working system with the > basics you need that you may not know by name. Then the apt-get will allow > you to ask for everything you specifically know you want. > > The downside is that it may be a little hard to find the correct package > names by what they do or what commands they include. I have only > just recently learned that there are ways to query this on the command > line (but they may only work for installed packages?). Anyway, myself, > I make used of the "packages search" on the Debian website to make > those determinations. > > Usually, you can just use apt-get to load stuff as you need it after that. > > And of course, once you get a collection of packages you like, you > can use the dpkg --get-selections and dpkg --set-selections to save > and retrieve your choices or replicate onto multiple computers. >
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