On 8/3/17, Thomas George <li...@tomgeorge.info> wrote: > I downloaded flash-player-ppapi_26.0.0.137-1_amd64.deb into /opt and > used dpkg -i to install it. > > Is this the best way to do it? dpkg -s flash-player-ppapi responds ok > installed but dpkg -p flash-player-ppapi doesn't recognize it.
I'm not sure what to tell you on the "where", but I tried your "dpkg -p" on several packages I have installed. I got the same message each time: dpkg-query: package 'inkscape' is not available Use dpkg --info (= dpkg-deb --info) to examine archive files, and dpkg --contents (= dpkg-deb --contents) to list their contents. So I hit up "man dpkg". It shows "dpkg-query -p" as an option. Ahh, so that's what the above might have been very subtly hinting. So I tried that while not knowing what the original "dpkg -p" query returns. I'm thinking this is probably not it: dpkg-query: package 'inkscape' is not available Use dpkg --info (= dpkg-deb --info) to examine archive files, and dpkg --contents (= dpkg-deb --contents) to list their contents. And I also tried both as root = same-same so I don't know. For what it may yield in solutions, I did see this under "dpkg-query" (under "man dpkg"): "-p, --print-avail package-name... Display details about package-name, as found in /var/lib/dpkg/available. Users of APT-based frontends should use apt-cache show package-name instead." Which I do personally use (that "apt-cache show package-name", I mean). That's all on Buster :) Cindy :) -- Cindy-Sue Causey Talking Rock, Pickens County, Georgia, USA * runs with duct tape *