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You need to choose whether to use the Debian Jr. Task Installer, which installs the majority of Debian Jr. components in one step, or whether to select and install individual components. If you use the Task Installer, review the installed components afterwards to see if there are others you would like to add to the ones installed by default.
To start the install, use the Task Installer (tasksel
). If you
are installing Debian Jr. as part of a fresh Debian install, then this is the
Simple
Package Selection
step after you have booted your new Debian system
for the first time. Otherwise, as root, run tasksel
from the
command-line.
Select "Debian Jr." from the "End User" section. (If you don't see this entry in the list of available tasks, you may have the problem addressed by Tasksel issues, Section 8.1.)
Next, select the "X Window System" task.
You may want to select a desktop environment task (Gnome or KDE). However, these each take up a fair amount of disk space and tend to be more resource intensive. For example, if you have a 486 with 32M of memory or less, you would probably be better off running a lightweight window manager instead.
When you exit tasksel
, the Debian Jr. task will be installed,
along with any other task selections you made.
Unless you use the KDE or Gnome tasks, which include a window manager, you will
need to install a window manager after tasksel
is done. For
example, Window Maker can be installed with this command:
apt-get install wmaker
Please note that optional Jr. packages need to be installed separately, as described in the following section.
Debian Jr. components have names starting with "junior-". These
packages may be installed individually with dselect
,
aptitude
or apt-get
. Which one you use is rather a
matter of taste.
If installing Debian Jr. as part of a fresh Debian install,
dselect
is run for you if you choose the Advanced
Package Selection
method after your first boot. Otherwise, as root,
you can run dselect
from the command line. The principal merit of
this method is that it is the officially sanctioned one in the Installation
Manual.
The new aptitude
package installer is an increasingly popular
alternative to dselect
. Although the author does not use this
installer, it appears to have a better user interface than dselect
and provides similar functionality. This method is not an option during the
Debian installation process, and is not installed on your system by default.
So if you want to use it, you need to install it first with apt-get
install aptitude.
The author's bias is to use apt-get
, due to the elegance of
managing the package installation process via simple commands. So if you
prefer a command-line interface, you may find this is your best choice. It is
not as self-explanatory as dselect
and aptitude
are
supposed to be, but the APT HOWTO
will
give you a good start with it.
If you are using dselect
, simply locate all packages with names
beginning 'junior-', select the desired components, and install them. (For
beginner help, see dselect
Documentation for Beginners
included in the Debian installation
documentation.)
Aptitude
groups packages that are in tasks under the
"Tasks" heading. However, if you wish to install the extra 'junior-'
packages not included in the task, you will find these by pressing '/' and then
typing 'junior-'. After finding the first match, press '\' to find the next.
(In this respect, finding a package is similar to dselect
which
uses the same keys for searching.)
If you are using apt-get
, list all the installed components, check
this list against the available components, and then select and install each
one in this way:
dpkg -l 'junior-*' apt-cache pkgnames junior- apt-get install junior-gnome junior-kde
In the example above, first dpkg is used to show the status of all
junior- package. Then apt-cache is used to show all
available components. Finally, apt-get install is used to install
junior-gnome
and junior-kde
. These are extra
components not present in the core Junior task.
This is not really an installation option in and of itself. We have provided
an example script in junior-doc
to generate a list of installed
and available Debian Jr. components as an HTML page. This list can then be
viewed with your preferred web browser to help explore Debian Jr. and decide
which components you wish to install, using one of the above methods. The list
contains links to packages.debian.org so you can browse the latest versions and
see what they contain.
The list-junior.sh
script needs two packages to be installed
before it can be run, so first apt-get install grep-dctrl wdiff.
Then, in a directory where you want the HTML page to be generated, type:
sh /usr/share/doc/junior-doc/examples/list-junior.sh
When the script completes, with any luck there will be a list-junior.html page in the current directory which you can browse with your favourite web browser.
Caveat user: This script is really a quick-and-dirty kludge and needs to be redone more robustly, so if it doesn't work for you, please be patient, we will make it into a proper program, complete with arguments, switches, man page and all those niceties in a future release.
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Debian Jr. Quick Guide
16 December 2021mailto:derek@gnu.org
mailto:synrg@debian.org