This is the command aptitude-run-state-bundle that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
aptitude-run-state-bundle - unpack an aptitude state bundle and invoke aptitude on it
SYNOPSIS
aptitude-run-state-bundle [<options>...] <input-file> [<program> [<arguments>...]]
DESCRIPTION
aptitude-run-state-bundle unpacks the given aptitude state bundle created by aptitude-
create-state-bundle(1) to a temporary directory, invokes <program> on it with the supplied
<arguments>, and removes the temporary directory afterwards. If <program> is not supplied,
it defaults to aptitude(8).
OPTIONS
The following options may occur on the command-line before the input file. Options
following the input file are presumed to be arguments to aptitude.
--append-args
Place the options that give the location of the state bundle at the end of the command
line when invoking <program>, rather than at the beginning (the default is to place
options at the beginning).
--help
Display a brief usage summary.
--prepend-args
Place the options that give the location of the state bundle at the beginning of the
command line when invoking <program>, overriding any previous --append-args (the
default is to place options at the beginning).
--no-clean
Do not remove the unpacked state directory after running aptitude. You might want to
use this if, for instance, you are debugging a problem that appears when aptitude's
state file is modified. When aptitude finishes running, the name of the state
directory will be printed so that you can access it in the future.
This option is enabled automatically by --statedir.
--really-clean
Delete the state directory after running aptitude, even if --no-clean or --statedir
was supplied.
--statedir
Instead of treating the input file as a state bundle, treat it as an unpacked state
bundle. For instance, you can use this to access the state directory that was created
by a prior run with --no-clean.
--unpack
Unpack the input file to a temporary directory, but don't actually run aptitude.
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