Mon fournisseur d'hébergement potentiel suggère d'exécuter une commande dans le terminal afin de minimiser l'image du système d'exploitation du serveur basé sur KVM. Étant donné que leurs modèles KVM sont fournis avec des packages dont je n’ai pas besoin, j’ai pensé que je pourrais utiliser cette même commande pour supprimer les packages indésirables.
Cette commande commence par DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
, puis appelle apt-get remove
comme suit:
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive apt-get remove --purge -y -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confdef" -o Dpkg::Options::="--force-confold" package-1 package-2 ... package-n; apt-get -y autoremove; apt-get clean all
C'est la première fois que je rencontre la variable d'environnement DEBIAN_FRONTEND
et je ne pouvais pas trouver d'informations utiles jusqu'à présent. Je me demande donc comment définir noninteractive
, et si cela est conseillé, car je suppose que la valeur (noninteractive
) persisterait.
Le simple ajout de la commande apt
avec DEBIAN_FRONTEND=something
ne persiste pas après la commande unique à laquelle elle est appliquée.
Les options DEBIAN_FRONTEND
sont documentées dans les pages de manuel Section 7 de debconf
(vous devrez peut-être installer le package debconf-doc
pour les rendre disponibles sur votre système). De man 7 debconf
:
Frontends
One of debconf's unique features is that the interface it presents to
you is only one of many, that can be swapped in at will. There are many
debconf frontends available:
dialog The default frontend, this uses the whiptail(1) or dialog(1)
programs to display questions to you. It works in text mode.
readline
The most traditional frontend, this looks quite similar to how
Debian configuration always has been: a series of questions,
printed out at the console using plain text, and prompts done
using the readline library. It even supports tab completion. The
libterm-readline-gnu-Perl package is strongly recommended if you
chose to use this frontend; the default readline module does not
support prompting with default values. At the minimum, you'll
need the Perl-modules package installed to use this frontend.
This frontend has some special hotkeys. Pageup (or ctrl-u) will
go back to the previous question (if that is supported by the
package that is using debconf), and pagedown (or ctrl-v) will
skip forward to the next question.
This is the best frontend for remote admin work over a slow con‐
nection, or for those who are comfortable with unix.
noninteractive
This is the anti-frontend. It never interacts with you at all,
and makes the default answers be used for all questions. It
might mail error messages to root, but that's it; otherwise it
is completely silent and unobtrusive, a perfect frontend for
automatic installs. If you are using this front-end, and require
non-default answers to questions, you will need to preseed the
debconf database; see the section below on Unattended Package
Installation for more details.
Il note également que:
You can change the default frontend debconf uses by reconfiguring deb‐
conf. On the other hand, if you just want to change the frontend for a
minute, you can set the DEBIAN_FRONTEND environment variable to the
name of the frontend to use. For example:
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=readline apt-get install slrn
The dpkg-reconfigure(8) and dpkg-preconfigure(8) commands also let you
pass --frontend= to them, followed by the frontend you want them to
use.
Note that not all frontends will work in all circumstances. If a fron‐
tend fails to start up for some reason, debconf will print out a mes‐
sage explaining why, and fall back to the next-most similar frontend.