= APT commands on Fedora APT is the package manager/dependency solver for the Debian ecosystem, i.e. it manages `.deb` packages installed by the DPKG program. Fedora software is based on `.rpm` packages, and thus uses DNF, the package manager/dependency solver for the RPM program, instead. This document gives a brief overview of the most common APT commands one might find in tutorials and their DNF equivalents. == APT vs. DNF commands .Apt vs DNF commands |=== | APT command | DNF command | notes | `apt update` `apt-get update` | `dnf check-update` | This command is rarely needed, as dnf updates its package cache automatically when it is stale. A cache update can be forced by appending `--refresh` to other commands, e.g. `dnf upgrade --refresh` | `apt upgrade` `apt-get upgrade` | `dnf upgrade` | | `apt full-upgrade` `apt-get dist-upgrade` | `dnf distro-sync` or `dnf system-upgrade` (see note) | While `distro-sync` is the most direct functional equivalent, `dnf system-upgrade` should be used to upgrade from one release to another, e.g. from Fedora 31 to 32. This is a multi-step process as described xref:dnf-system-upgrade.adoc[here]. | `apt remove` `apt-get remove` | `dnf remove` | | `apt purge` `apt-get purge` | --- | | `apt autoremove` `apt-get autoremove` | `dnf autoremove` | | `apt search` `apt-cache search` | `dnf search` | |=== With the exception of the distribution upgrade working differently and DNF updating the cache automatically, the commands are very similar. More info on DNF can be found xref:dnf.adoc[here]. == Why is APT in the Fedora repositories? WARNING: APT *can not* be used to install packages on Fedora, you *have to use DNF* instead. The `apt` command on Fedora used to - until https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Move_apt_package_from_RPM_to_DPKG_backend[Fedora 32] - actually be APT-RPM, which basically mapped normal apt commands so that they worked with Fedora's RPM package management system. However, APT-RPM is unmaintained, broken & insecure, and so was dropped in favour of shipping the actual Debian APT software. Since APT exclusively deals with `.deb` packages, the `apt` command can no longer be used to manage Fedora packages. Its purpose is now purely as a tool for people building packages for Debian-based distributions on a Fedora system.