DNF and its APT command equivalents on Fedora
APT is the package manager/dependency solver for the Debian ecosystem, i.e. it manages .deb
packages installed by the DPKG program. Fedora software is based on .rpm
packages, and thus uses DNF, the package manager/dependency solver for the RPM program, instead. This document gives a brief overview of the most common APT commands one might find in tutorials and their DNF equivalents.
APT vs. DNF commands
APT command | DNF command | notes |
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Of course, actual package names may vary. For example, |
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Updates only already installed package and its dependencies. The |
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This command is rarely needed, as dnf updates its package cache automatically when it is stale. A cache update can be forced by appending |
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Note that while |
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While |
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Fedora packages don’t treat configuration files in the same way as Debian packages, so there is no direct equivalent. |
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Note that this can occasionally remove packages that you might actually want. Use |
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With the exceptions of the distribution upgrade working differently, and DNF updating the cache automatically, the commands are very similar. More info on DNF can be found here.
Why is APT in the Fedora repositories?
APT can not be used to install packages on Fedora, you have to use DNF instead. |
The apt
command on Fedora used to — until Fedora 32 — actually be APT-RPM, which basically mapped normal apt commands so that they worked with Fedora’s RPM package management system.
However, APT-RPM is unmaintained, broken, and insecure, and so was dropped in favour of shipping the actual Debian APT software. Since APT exclusively deals with .deb
packages, the apt
command can no longer be used to manage Fedora packages. Its purpose is now purely as a tool for people building packages for Debian-based distributions on a Fedora system.
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