Example: debconf
- Graph from apt-cache (for comparison)
- Basic graph (only hard dependencies and conflicts)
- Basic graph with Recommends
- Basic graph with Recommends and Suggests
- Basic graph with Recommends and showing alternatives
- Default graph (showing Recommends, alternatives and versions)
- Default graph with Suggests
- Default graph with Suggests and versioned Conflicts
- Default graph (rotated)
This graph is roughly equivalent to:
$ debtree --no-recommends --no-versions --versioned-conflicts --rotate debconf
Not the most beautiful graph, mostly due to the conflicts from perl-base.
The 7th example generated with debtree also
shows them, but looks much more structured (besides showing a lot of additional
information).
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$ apt-cache dotty debconf
Generated .dot file: |
DOT |
Full-sized images: |
PS | PNG | SVG |
Equivalent graph for aptitude
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