How to get the list of all application installed which has GUI?

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up vote
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I want a list of all installed application which has GUI. To be clear, At least all the application that are listed in "Show Applications".


I tried several commands like apt list --installed, dpkg -l, find, etc. also tried some python scripts to get the list of all installed application which all ended up missing some applications (like Android Studio, b1freearchiver, pyCharm, etc.)


Additional info: I'm running Ubuntu 18.04 desktop.









share





















  • What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
    – Sathish Kanna
    2 hours ago











  • It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago











  • wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago














up vote
3
down vote

favorite
2












I want a list of all installed application which has GUI. To be clear, At least all the application that are listed in "Show Applications".


I tried several commands like apt list --installed, dpkg -l, find, etc. also tried some python scripts to get the list of all installed application which all ended up missing some applications (like Android Studio, b1freearchiver, pyCharm, etc.)


Additional info: I'm running Ubuntu 18.04 desktop.









share





















  • What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
    – Sathish Kanna
    2 hours ago











  • It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago











  • wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago












up vote
3
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
3
down vote

favorite
2






2





I want a list of all installed application which has GUI. To be clear, At least all the application that are listed in "Show Applications".


I tried several commands like apt list --installed, dpkg -l, find, etc. also tried some python scripts to get the list of all installed application which all ended up missing some applications (like Android Studio, b1freearchiver, pyCharm, etc.)


Additional info: I'm running Ubuntu 18.04 desktop.









share













I want a list of all installed application which has GUI. To be clear, At least all the application that are listed in "Show Applications".


I tried several commands like apt list --installed, dpkg -l, find, etc. also tried some python scripts to get the list of all installed application which all ended up missing some applications (like Android Studio, b1freearchiver, pyCharm, etc.)


Additional info: I'm running Ubuntu 18.04 desktop.







apt package-management gui python3





share












share










share



share










asked 2 hours ago









Sathish Kanna

987




987











  • What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
    – Sathish Kanna
    2 hours ago











  • It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago











  • wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago
















  • What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
    – Sathish Kanna
    2 hours ago











  • It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
    – Xen2050
    2 hours ago










  • actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago











  • wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago















What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
– Xen2050
2 hours ago




What would you search for specifically? Packages that have some type of display as a dependency? Or just try searching for all .desktop files?
– Xen2050
2 hours ago












I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
– Sathish Kanna
2 hours ago





I'm searching for installed application name. i thought all application would have .desktop so i used find '/usr/share/applications/' -type f -iname '*.desktop' to search for application
– Sathish Kanna
2 hours ago













It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
– Xen2050
2 hours ago




It seems that gui programs mostly have .desktop files, terminal programs (like the coreutils) don't usually bother. If searching for those files worked, I might as well post it as an answer
– Xen2050
2 hours ago












actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago





actually i tried /home/ and /usr/ searching for .desktop i haven't got few applications.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago













wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago




wouldn't that be easy to find the folder or file that is used by the 'Show Applications' menu to get all the applications listed in it.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
2
down vote













Try searching for all the .desktop files, Gnome's Developer website calls them the "registered set of applications that users can run" and they're almost always GUI programs.



This answer (How can I find *.desktop files?) says you could just search everywhere for .desktop files with



find / -name '*.desktop'


Or they're probably only in /usr/share/applications/ and ~/.local/share/applications so just looking there might be sufficient.






share|improve this answer




















  • almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    32 mins ago

















up vote
1
down vote













As compliment to the @Xen2050 answer you can determine exact package names of the deb-packages (so they are known to APT) having *.desktop files with this one-liner:



dpkg --search '*.desktop' | awk 'print $1' | sed "s/://" | sort --unique


In the command above:




  • dpkg --search '*.desktop' will search for packages having *.desktop files;


  • | is redirect from output of previous command to the input of next command;


  • awk 'print $1' will print first column of search result (usually in form plank: /usr/share/applications/plank.desktop - so you will get plank:);


  • sed "s/://" will remove unnecessary : from package name (you will get plank here);


  • sort --unique will sort the results and remove duplicates from them.

On my Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS it returns about 347 unique package names.




If you have installed some software to the home folder - then you can use command below



find ~ -name '*.desktop'


or more precise



find ~/.local/share/applications/ '*.desktop'


to find their *.desktop files.






share|improve this answer






















  • actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago










  • Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
    – N0rbert
    1 hour ago

















up vote
0
down vote













Generally, that's difficult to determine. The other answers aren't addressing that command line apps also may have .desktop files or GUI apps may not provide a . desktop file. Besides there's no guarantee an app referenced in the .desktop file still exists on the system( you'd have to run it to know or check Exec= line for existing path). Thus it's a poor criteria.



What can be done, however is ask a better question. What apps depend on GUI ? That can be found with apt-cache rdepends 'package or lib'. For instance, apt-cache rdepends libappindicator will show packages that have that lib as dependency and probably provide such applet.



But also to be fair, a terminal app may also interface with GUI without actually having a GUI interface. If your goal to find apps with GUI front-end seek apps that depend on Gtk or Qt libraries



Of course, it also depends of whether package maintainer properly provided dependency description for their package. For standard Ubuntu repositories that's OK. For external PPA that depends on the developers and maintainers.






share|improve this answer






















  • $ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
    – Xen2050
    12 mins ago










  • @Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    3 mins ago










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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
2
down vote













Try searching for all the .desktop files, Gnome's Developer website calls them the "registered set of applications that users can run" and they're almost always GUI programs.



This answer (How can I find *.desktop files?) says you could just search everywhere for .desktop files with



find / -name '*.desktop'


Or they're probably only in /usr/share/applications/ and ~/.local/share/applications so just looking there might be sufficient.






share|improve this answer




















  • almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    32 mins ago














up vote
2
down vote













Try searching for all the .desktop files, Gnome's Developer website calls them the "registered set of applications that users can run" and they're almost always GUI programs.



This answer (How can I find *.desktop files?) says you could just search everywhere for .desktop files with



find / -name '*.desktop'


Or they're probably only in /usr/share/applications/ and ~/.local/share/applications so just looking there might be sufficient.






share|improve this answer




















  • almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    32 mins ago












up vote
2
down vote










up vote
2
down vote









Try searching for all the .desktop files, Gnome's Developer website calls them the "registered set of applications that users can run" and they're almost always GUI programs.



This answer (How can I find *.desktop files?) says you could just search everywhere for .desktop files with



find / -name '*.desktop'


Or they're probably only in /usr/share/applications/ and ~/.local/share/applications so just looking there might be sufficient.






share|improve this answer












Try searching for all the .desktop files, Gnome's Developer website calls them the "registered set of applications that users can run" and they're almost always GUI programs.



This answer (How can I find *.desktop files?) says you could just search everywhere for .desktop files with



find / -name '*.desktop'


Or they're probably only in /usr/share/applications/ and ~/.local/share/applications so just looking there might be sufficient.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 1 hour ago









Xen2050

6,55912142




6,55912142











  • almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    32 mins ago
















  • almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    32 mins ago















almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
32 mins ago




almost always isn't a very good criteria. Python has .desktop file, byobu does too. These aren't GUI programs, and in fact command line apps may state Terminal=True in . desktop file to open default terminal. A .desktop file != GUI app
– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
32 mins ago












up vote
1
down vote













As compliment to the @Xen2050 answer you can determine exact package names of the deb-packages (so they are known to APT) having *.desktop files with this one-liner:



dpkg --search '*.desktop' | awk 'print $1' | sed "s/://" | sort --unique


In the command above:




  • dpkg --search '*.desktop' will search for packages having *.desktop files;


  • | is redirect from output of previous command to the input of next command;


  • awk 'print $1' will print first column of search result (usually in form plank: /usr/share/applications/plank.desktop - so you will get plank:);


  • sed "s/://" will remove unnecessary : from package name (you will get plank here);


  • sort --unique will sort the results and remove duplicates from them.

On my Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS it returns about 347 unique package names.




If you have installed some software to the home folder - then you can use command below



find ~ -name '*.desktop'


or more precise



find ~/.local/share/applications/ '*.desktop'


to find their *.desktop files.






share|improve this answer






















  • actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago










  • Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
    – N0rbert
    1 hour ago














up vote
1
down vote













As compliment to the @Xen2050 answer you can determine exact package names of the deb-packages (so they are known to APT) having *.desktop files with this one-liner:



dpkg --search '*.desktop' | awk 'print $1' | sed "s/://" | sort --unique


In the command above:




  • dpkg --search '*.desktop' will search for packages having *.desktop files;


  • | is redirect from output of previous command to the input of next command;


  • awk 'print $1' will print first column of search result (usually in form plank: /usr/share/applications/plank.desktop - so you will get plank:);


  • sed "s/://" will remove unnecessary : from package name (you will get plank here);


  • sort --unique will sort the results and remove duplicates from them.

On my Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS it returns about 347 unique package names.




If you have installed some software to the home folder - then you can use command below



find ~ -name '*.desktop'


or more precise



find ~/.local/share/applications/ '*.desktop'


to find their *.desktop files.






share|improve this answer






















  • actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago










  • Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
    – N0rbert
    1 hour ago












up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









As compliment to the @Xen2050 answer you can determine exact package names of the deb-packages (so they are known to APT) having *.desktop files with this one-liner:



dpkg --search '*.desktop' | awk 'print $1' | sed "s/://" | sort --unique


In the command above:




  • dpkg --search '*.desktop' will search for packages having *.desktop files;


  • | is redirect from output of previous command to the input of next command;


  • awk 'print $1' will print first column of search result (usually in form plank: /usr/share/applications/plank.desktop - so you will get plank:);


  • sed "s/://" will remove unnecessary : from package name (you will get plank here);


  • sort --unique will sort the results and remove duplicates from them.

On my Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS it returns about 347 unique package names.




If you have installed some software to the home folder - then you can use command below



find ~ -name '*.desktop'


or more precise



find ~/.local/share/applications/ '*.desktop'


to find their *.desktop files.






share|improve this answer














As compliment to the @Xen2050 answer you can determine exact package names of the deb-packages (so they are known to APT) having *.desktop files with this one-liner:



dpkg --search '*.desktop' | awk 'print $1' | sed "s/://" | sort --unique


In the command above:




  • dpkg --search '*.desktop' will search for packages having *.desktop files;


  • | is redirect from output of previous command to the input of next command;


  • awk 'print $1' will print first column of search result (usually in form plank: /usr/share/applications/plank.desktop - so you will get plank:);


  • sed "s/://" will remove unnecessary : from package name (you will get plank here);


  • sort --unique will sort the results and remove duplicates from them.

On my Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS it returns about 347 unique package names.




If you have installed some software to the home folder - then you can use command below



find ~ -name '*.desktop'


or more precise



find ~/.local/share/applications/ '*.desktop'


to find their *.desktop files.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago

























answered 1 hour ago









N0rbert

18.3k43886




18.3k43886











  • actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago










  • Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
    – N0rbert
    1 hour ago
















  • actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
    – Sathish Kanna
    1 hour ago










  • Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
    – N0rbert
    1 hour ago















actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago




actually not all application provide .desktop at least the applications i mentioned in the question.
– Sathish Kanna
1 hour ago












Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
– N0rbert
1 hour ago




Usually many applications were installed by APT. If you have installed software with Snap, AppImage, Ubuntu Make, FlatPak, compiled them from source code - then you should find them manually :)
– N0rbert
1 hour ago










up vote
0
down vote













Generally, that's difficult to determine. The other answers aren't addressing that command line apps also may have .desktop files or GUI apps may not provide a . desktop file. Besides there's no guarantee an app referenced in the .desktop file still exists on the system( you'd have to run it to know or check Exec= line for existing path). Thus it's a poor criteria.



What can be done, however is ask a better question. What apps depend on GUI ? That can be found with apt-cache rdepends 'package or lib'. For instance, apt-cache rdepends libappindicator will show packages that have that lib as dependency and probably provide such applet.



But also to be fair, a terminal app may also interface with GUI without actually having a GUI interface. If your goal to find apps with GUI front-end seek apps that depend on Gtk or Qt libraries



Of course, it also depends of whether package maintainer properly provided dependency description for their package. For standard Ubuntu repositories that's OK. For external PPA that depends on the developers and maintainers.






share|improve this answer






















  • $ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
    – Xen2050
    12 mins ago










  • @Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    3 mins ago














up vote
0
down vote













Generally, that's difficult to determine. The other answers aren't addressing that command line apps also may have .desktop files or GUI apps may not provide a . desktop file. Besides there's no guarantee an app referenced in the .desktop file still exists on the system( you'd have to run it to know or check Exec= line for existing path). Thus it's a poor criteria.



What can be done, however is ask a better question. What apps depend on GUI ? That can be found with apt-cache rdepends 'package or lib'. For instance, apt-cache rdepends libappindicator will show packages that have that lib as dependency and probably provide such applet.



But also to be fair, a terminal app may also interface with GUI without actually having a GUI interface. If your goal to find apps with GUI front-end seek apps that depend on Gtk or Qt libraries



Of course, it also depends of whether package maintainer properly provided dependency description for their package. For standard Ubuntu repositories that's OK. For external PPA that depends on the developers and maintainers.






share|improve this answer






















  • $ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
    – Xen2050
    12 mins ago










  • @Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    3 mins ago












up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









Generally, that's difficult to determine. The other answers aren't addressing that command line apps also may have .desktop files or GUI apps may not provide a . desktop file. Besides there's no guarantee an app referenced in the .desktop file still exists on the system( you'd have to run it to know or check Exec= line for existing path). Thus it's a poor criteria.



What can be done, however is ask a better question. What apps depend on GUI ? That can be found with apt-cache rdepends 'package or lib'. For instance, apt-cache rdepends libappindicator will show packages that have that lib as dependency and probably provide such applet.



But also to be fair, a terminal app may also interface with GUI without actually having a GUI interface. If your goal to find apps with GUI front-end seek apps that depend on Gtk or Qt libraries



Of course, it also depends of whether package maintainer properly provided dependency description for their package. For standard Ubuntu repositories that's OK. For external PPA that depends on the developers and maintainers.






share|improve this answer














Generally, that's difficult to determine. The other answers aren't addressing that command line apps also may have .desktop files or GUI apps may not provide a . desktop file. Besides there's no guarantee an app referenced in the .desktop file still exists on the system( you'd have to run it to know or check Exec= line for existing path). Thus it's a poor criteria.



What can be done, however is ask a better question. What apps depend on GUI ? That can be found with apt-cache rdepends 'package or lib'. For instance, apt-cache rdepends libappindicator will show packages that have that lib as dependency and probably provide such applet.



But also to be fair, a terminal app may also interface with GUI without actually having a GUI interface. If your goal to find apps with GUI front-end seek apps that depend on Gtk or Qt libraries



Of course, it also depends of whether package maintainer properly provided dependency description for their package. For standard Ubuntu repositories that's OK. For external PPA that depends on the developers and maintainers.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 17 mins ago

























answered 25 mins ago









Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy

67.4k9137300




67.4k9137300











  • $ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
    – Xen2050
    12 mins ago










  • @Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    3 mins ago
















  • $ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
    – Xen2050
    12 mins ago










  • @Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
    – Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
    3 mins ago















$ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
– Xen2050
12 mins ago




$ apt-cache rdepends libappindicator returns E: No packages found, but searching for libappindicator* does find the version I've got installed (and the other 6 I don't), but the reverse depends it lists mostly aren't installed either. Sounds like it's on the right track though
– Xen2050
12 mins ago












@Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
3 mins ago




@Xen2050 The package name libappindicator is written on phone and from memory, so it may not be exactly correct. The point still stands, though. Look for what needs GUI not look for GUI
– Sergiy Kolodyazhnyy
3 mins ago

















 

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