![](https://seccdn.libravatar.org/avatar/d90575edf95bf692363b68c52b5eb0ed.jpg?s=120&d=mm&r=g)
On 2/3/21 9:07 PM, Felix Miata wrote:
Doug McGarrett composed on 2021-02-03 20:04 (UTC-0500):
(In the meantime, I might observe that some older bash Linux commands have, for some reason, been removed from the system. One I can think of is apt-get, but I have run across others.) Apt-get isn't a "Linux" command. It's a Debian package management command. openSUSE isn't a Debian, or Debian derived (which is what *buntus and Mint and many more distros are). openSUSE uses an entirely different package management system (comprised of zypper, rpm and yast*). When Googling for help, it's often best to ignore hits that include apt, buntu, mint, neon or debian in title or URL. Yes, I have looked it up, and find that it was invented by Ubuntu, but it worked in OpenSUSE as recently as April 2019 release. It also used to work in PCLOS, 6 years ago-- don't know about now after they castrated it. And yes, I do ignore references to the deb system distros. --doug