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I've been using ubuntu for almost four years now. I am pretty sure there are many applications and packages i never use (like empathy, for example) and i would like to know which ones they are.

Is there any way to know which applications or packages are used very seldom (or never) so i can get rid of them?

tx.

didgewind
  • 259

2 Answers2

1

There are some good applications available which I feel will solve your problem:

Ubuntu Tweak

Allows you to easily flush out the following: -

  • Downloaded packages no longer needed (installed packages)
  • Sweep up the update cache (E.G. .debs of all the updates recently installed)
  • Old configuration files for applications since removed
  • Old kernels

BleachBit

Use BleachBit to:

  • Free disk space
  • Reduce the size of backups and the time to create them by removing unnecessary files
  • Maintain privacy
  • Improve system performance (by vacuuming the Firefox database, for example)
  • Prepare whole disk images for compression (common for "ghost" backups and virtual machines) by wiping free disk space

GTKOrphan

It analyses your system for orphaned libraries and then offers them up for removal, freeing up space.

There is one more tool available by default : Computer Janitor But I will advice to make sure what you are doing before using it.

Amol Sale
  • 1,043
0

I would love to find out how to compile a list of seldom-used applications automatically myself, but I suspect it may be a bit tricky (the relation between a "package" and an "application" is not that straightforward, for one thing; some programs are used by other programs, a package can contain multiple executables or none at all; some applications may actually be started automatically each time you boot but never actually used by you, and so on).

What I sometimes do on machines with little RAM/disk space (just did it yesterday on an original EeePC with a 4Gb SSD):

  • install synaptic
  • in the left pane, select to show all installed applications
  • go through the list, marking the packages I don't need to be removed
  • after the apps are uninstalled, run sudo apt-get autoremove to uninstall any libraries installed as dependencies of the uninstalled applications.

The process is a bit time-consuming (maybe an hour or so) and is only justified if you're really tight on disk space (or just having fun). On the other hand, it allows to remove more than any automated process would - for example, I was never going to use bluetooth or printing on that machine so I removed bluez and cups packages, which otherwise are actually in use by the system.

It is possible to break your Ubuntu if you're not careful, but otherwise it's a great learning exercise.

Sergey
  • 44,353