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Whohas – Command-line utility for cross-distro, cross-repository package search

I made this in under 100 lines bash and it supports Arch, RHEL-based, Debian-based, Alpine and OpenSuse. But the problem is that some distros just have rubbish native search of package files.

And of course my tool searches their native package manager, not their online services, API, package repos. That's a completely different approach.

an hour agoINTPenis

First I saw that it's written in Perl. Then I realized that the last release was 11 years ago and that the repository domains are hardcoded in the one-file script.

20 hours agochb

Does it still work, though?

Where else would you put the repository domains?

19 hours agoIntralexical

I would put them into a configuration file. You know, so people can configure which repositories are being searched.

Generally I advice against hard doing stuff that changes often and may need to be adjusted for different users or organizations.

3 hours agoatoav

Are you asking if this tool can find something on ubuntu 26.04 when the urls it has were hardcoded 11 years ago?

17 hours agohalJordan

The URL to search for packages in Ubuntu for example hasn't changed to my knowledge. Are you assuming it's only looking for packages in releases that were current at the time?

16 hours agoc-hendricks

In about a hundred or so separate microservices, of course…

17 hours agopimlottc

The last commit was four years ago.

16 hours agothilog

Who has?

Nixpkgs has. :)

Nowadays the only search like this I need to run is

  nix-locate -r 'bin/foo$'
It would be nice to have a CLI alternative to Repology, though.
17 hours agopxc

Another great tool, built on top of nix-locate, is comma. So for any program foo, if you have foo installed, you can run it like this:

  foo
And if you don't have it installed, you can run it (without installing!) like this:

  , foo
And if multiple different packages provide a program named bin/foo then comma lets you interactively choose the one you want, and remembers your choice so you don't have to specify again unless you choose to via the -d flag.
14 hours agosestep

....

     function repology() {
         curl -L --user-agent 'hackernews' \
             "http://repology.org/api/v1/project/$@"
    }
11 hours agofoobarqux
[deleted]
10 hours ago

Latest release: May 19, 2015

Abandoned, but forkable (since FOSS), and a decent idea.

Probably nowadays this gets done in Node, parsing the package search websites. Preferably, this would be done via an API though.

19 hours agoFnoord

> Probably nowadays this gets done in Node, parsing the package search websites. Preferably, this would be done via an API though.

Repology provides an API but it's unstable: https://repology.org/api/v1

19 hours agoRunningDroid

Yes, agree. The idea and concept is cool! Imo worth it to keep an eye on it and play with it.

First thought, which came to my mind, was a security use case to get it to a point for sbom handling and tracking. In particular, respective to all the recent package vulnerabilities.

19 hours agolschueller

Shame Homebrew for Linux is getting no love from any of the tools / lists mentioned here.

Since switching to that and flatpak my distro choice is "what sticks closest to the upstream of [my preferred DE]"

17 hours agoc-hendricks

Do Linux users actually use Homebrew day to day? My impression of it was that it's mostly for MacOS users that want to keep doing things the same way instead of learning the Linux way (using the OS package manager).

15 hours agodan15

I have for a while yeah. As mentioned it means the distro packages don't matter for a lot of developer tools / CLIs. Wanna use a stable Debian / Ubuntu LTS for years? Want to use rolling releases so your desktop is up to date? Homebrew's got you covered.

13 hours agoc-hendricks

In bazzite/Fedora Silverblue, it's the expected way non-GUI packages are installed to the host system. The other way is toolbox/distrobox (rootless containers tightly integrated with the host).

14 hours agoElectricalUnion

It’s the default package manager in Bazzite and is once of the most functional packagr managers on atomic fedora.

14 hours agodata-ottawa

I use it on DSM (Synology OS) because all the software can be easily installed outside of DSM.

9 hours agoFnoord

I've been working on a GUI task manager for Linux and I've been wanting to put a "Funding" or ownership meta data next to the process or process group in the view so people can know where the upstream code lives, how to support the project, and what organizational unit "owns" that process.

So I actually vibe coded a script that does this against a sqlite db I've been considering to bundle with my task manager so it can know this stuff on the fly.

But yea this is a key missing component in Linux user space. Windows let's you encode organizational stuff into an exe but on Linux binaries don't really have that.

18 hours agohparadiz

You can usually get info about the upstream from the package metadata, e.g. on Debian:

  $ apt info whohas
  ...
  Homepage: http://www.philippwesche.org/200811/whohas/intro.html
  ...
The distribution model on Linux (generally speaking) is different from Windows, though, so I don't think it makes sense to view processes as fully "owned" by the upstream in the same way as on Windows. Instead of letting each individual organization directly have administrator access to rummage around on our machines and install packages, this is mostly delegated to the Linux distribution, which may customize the packages. (And of course the user has the right to customize the program as well, assuming it's FOSS, so ultimately the user is the owner of their own processes.)
2 hours agoptx

Packages are not binaries. When I write software for Linux I'm not gonna sit there and wait for apt whatever to run in the background. That was the whole point of the sqlite db. Don't worry I poll the entire debian database.... and ubuntu ..... and fedora.... and gentoo.... . and arch..... etc.

The tldr is binaries on linux really should have org unit as a meta data field because when I write a task manager in C it needs to be fast.

2 hours agohparadiz

It already exists, the appstream spec can associate binaries with metadata.

8 hours agoTingPing

[dead]

2 hours agohparadiz

This would pair nicely with distrobox or Bedrock Linux:)

19 hours agoyjftsjthsd-h
[deleted]
19 hours ago

Oh nice, I just implemented something like this for installing from any package manager uv-style https://abxpkg.archivebox.io/, but I haven't added a "search" command yet, I should add that!

15 hours agonikisweeting

Interesting, I've been wanting something like this. My main deal though is updates: how is that handled? Would love some kind of auto-update with a review/notification mechanism.

5 hours agoskeledrew

This is exactly the kind of boring CLI tool that earns its keep. Package names and availability differ just enough across distros to waste time in tiny annoying increments.

14 hours agodeferredgrant

"Just gimme thething, I don't care where from" is a great way to get supply chain vulns

10 hours agoTZubiri

This kind of busy work should suit an AI agent:

Go and find me all the repolists and package/software metadata for any distro and OS ever released. Write the results to a local SQLite. Incrementally update, but don't hammer the sources to death. Provide a web UI and CLI.

18 hours agobblb

Or you know, you could do that with a ~100 long script. You don't have to use LLMs for everything, especially when you're not dealing with freeform text at all, use data types and data structures, we've created the concepts for a reason.

18 hours agoembedding-shape

Sure. But then I would have to use my brain to actually write code. I thought we were past that already. Also, if it's an agent that keeps scouring the net autonomously for more distros, then I wouldn't have to update the sources manually on my 100 line script.