Provided by: debian-goodies_0.88.2ubuntu1_all 

NAME
dglob - Expand package names or files matching a pattern
SYNOPSIS
dglob [-a] pattern
dglob [-0] -f pattern
DESCRIPTION
dglob lists packages names matching a substring pattern. It can also list all the files they contain. By
default dglob only searches installed packages; the -a and -n switch widens the search (see "OPTIONS").
The list is written to stdout, one name per line.
grep-dctrl(1) and grep-aptavail(1) are used to search the list of packages, so you should refer to its
documentation for information on how patterns are matched. By default, all packages whose name contains
the given string will be matched, but several options are available to modify this behavior (see
"OPTIONS").
If you use dglob with the -f option, all files in the matched packages are listed instead of their names.
If you do not use de -a switch, only existing, plain (i.e. no symlinks, directories or other special
ones) files are listed. If the -a switch is use then all files will be listed both for installed and non-
installed packages. The filenames are written to stdout, one file per line. You can use the -0 option to
get the filenames separated by '\0' instead of a newline.
OPTIONS
dglob supports the following options:
-a Search through all available packages, not just installed ones. If set, grep-aptavail(1) is used.
-A Do not emit architecture qualifiers on result.
-n Search through all the available packages but not including installed ones. If set, grep-aptavail(1)
is used.
-f List all files in the matched packages. By default, this lists only installed (i.e. locally
existing) files from installed packages. If used together with -a then it will list all files both of
installed and non-installed packages by mean of apt-file(1). If apt-file is not installed, using -f
together with -a is rather pointless.
-0 When listing files (with -f) use '\0' as a separator instead of a newline. When specified without -f,
this options does nothing.
-r, -e, -i, -X, -v
These options are passed directly to grep-dctrl(1) or to grep-aptavail(1) to modify how the pattern
is matched. See grep-dctrl(1).
EXAMPLES
$ dglob libc6
libc6-dbg:amd64
libc6:amd64
libc6:i386
libc6-i386:amd64
libc6-dev:amd64
$ dglob libc6:amd64
libc6-dbg:amd64
libc6:amd64
libc6-i386:amd64
libc6-dev:amd64
$ dglob zsh:all
zsh-syntax-highlighting:all
zsh-theme-powerlevel9k:all
zsh-doc:all
zsh-common:all
zsh-antigen:all
fizsh:all
$ dglob -n libc6:i386
libc6-amd64-dbgsym:i386
libc6-amd64:i386
libc6-dbg:i386
libc6-dev-amd64:i386
libc6-dev-x32:i386
libc6-dev:i386
libc6-pic:i386
libc6-x32-dbgsym:i386
libc6-x32:i386
libc6-xen:i386
$ dglob -a :amd64 | wc -l
45846
$ dglob -a :i386 | wc -l
45185
$ dglob -a :all | wc -l
28995
FILES
/var/lib/dpkg/status
dpkg(8) status file, which serves as source for the list of available and installed packages.
AUTHORS
Matt Zimmerman <mdz@debian.org> Axel Beckert <abe@debian.org>
This manpage was written by Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de>, and further enhanced by Javier
Fernandez-Sanguino <jfs@debian.org>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
Copyright (C) 2001 Matt Zimmerman <mdz@debian.org>.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your
option) any later version.
On Debian systems, a copy of the GNU General Public License version 2 can be found in
/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL-2.
SEE ALSO
grep-dctrl(1), grep-available(1), apt-file(1), dpkg(8)
perl v5.40.0 2024-12-12 DGLOB(1)