apt-cache dump --installed doesn't work, it lists uninstalled packages as well.
I want to list the install packages each by one line, with the installed version number.
The simplest way is using dpkg, but it might show a few extraneous packages and it truncates long package names and version numbers:
dpkg -l
To list only correctly installed packages and not truncate names:
dpkg -l | grep '^ii'
To get more control over the output format, you can use dpkg-query:
dpkg-query -W -f '${status} ${package} ${version}\n' | \
sed -n 's/^install ok installed //p'
Other command can be:
apt-show-versions
It also gives you info about the package state (up to date, upgradable, ...) and about the origin distribution (wheezy, jessie, ...). One can easily filter out packages which came from backports or other exotic repositories.
This program is packaged separately. Install it first with:
apt-get install apt-show-versions
The following command lists the packages with their versions, and additionally it lets you set up a system with the same packages and versions later, using the pkg-selections.txt file generated here:
aptitude -q -F "%?p=%?V %M" --disable-columns search \~i > pkg-selections.txt
Each line will contain package name, version and an optional "A" if the package was installed automatically.
Source: "Cloning a Debian system - identical packages and versions". Also contains the script that sets up a system from pkg-selections.txt.
To list the names of each installed package, type as any user:
dpkg --get-selections
You will get an output like this :
accountsservice install
aclinstall install
acpi-supportinstall install
acpidinstall install
...
To remove the unecessary "install" character string, you can use sed :
dpkg --get-selections | sed 's:install$::'
And if yout want to save it to a file called InstalledPackages, you type this :
dpkg --get-selections | sed 's:install$::' > InstalledPackages
If you do not have access to live system, and have a backup of root/ partition, you can :
root@backup_server /mnt/old_root/var/lib/dpkg/info # ls -la *.list | awk {'print $9'}| sed 's/.list//' >> /root/installed_app
Now this /root/installed_app contain all installed packages!
For anyone finding this question years later, like I did:
apt you can do apt list --installed for a pretty printed list.dpkg-query -W without any formating options gives you package name and version.sed -En 's/^(Package|Version): //p' /var/lib/dpkg/status | paste - - Will give you the same output as above. This works without debian/ubuntu tools (say Ubuntu rootfs is mounted from RHEL).