

Tells you what to pull out of ubuntu 18.04 to install it. If it sounds like it is removing a lot of stuff - don't and ask here.Īnd before you start messing around with your system like this - make sure you have a backup - timeshift is your friend. You can search on the package name and it will tell you what is installed. To remove stuff - use the synaptic package manager (it's under the admin menu). I try and avoid flatpaks, snaps and appimages. Snaps is closed source proprietary (to Canonical, the ubuntu developer) so is not enabled by default in LM. Downside - they take up a lot more disk space.

Then there are flatpaks, snaps and appimages - these are all attempts to get round the problem of dependencies by providing everything you need in one package. Note - installing software is not normally this difficult, if it is not in software manager, then google for a deb file supplied by the developer or a ppa. Happened to me with one package out of ubuntu 18.04, installed about half a dozen dependencies only to get a circular dependency to a package already installed but later version. Then you find something else depends on more_stuff version 1.2 but you already have more_stuff version 2.0 already installed. Then find that depends on something else, so you find that download and install. Most worked, one didn't.ĭependency hell = you download and install the dependency, e.g. There were a number of packages I used in LM19, no longer available in LM20. Not the simplest way to install stuff, but something you may have to do for things that used to be in the repos and have been removed - install it from a previous version. It's showing the version for ubuntu 21.04, so you can click that and scroll down the next page to find the url to use with wget. If you are running LM20, you want ubuntu 21.04 and the amd64 version (64 bit), which leads to:

Googling download amule deb gave the hit: Or I can leave everything like this, without uninstalling anything.ģ) For your experience, will aMule be added Application Manager?Īfter all, not even a single client for the ed2k network has been included. I checked the individual dependencies listed in the link you wrote me, only one would be missing, libcrypto ++ 8.ġ) I don't want to occupy your time too much, if you can explain me how to do it, step by step, I would be grateful, otherwise I can always use eMule for Windows with Wine which seemed to work well on Kubuntu.Ģ) If I am unable to complete the installation of aMule following your advice, I would still have to uninstall everything I had installed of aMule, how to do it? I would not want to enter the hell of dependencies
