311

I'm working on a Ubuntu system and currently this is what I'm doing:

if ! which command > /dev/null; then
   echo -e "Command not found! Install? (y/n) \c"
   read
   if "$REPLY" = "y"; then
      sudo apt-get install command
   fi
fi

Is this what most people would do? Or is there a more elegant solution?

6
  • 9
    Command names does not always reflect the package name they are belong to. What is you're larger goal? Why don't you simply try to install it, and worst case it won't, since it's already installed.
    – viam0Zah
    Commented Aug 19, 2009 at 6:25
  • 13
    Fortunately, apt-get install is idempotent, so it is safe to just run it and not worry about if it is installed or not. Commented Mar 31, 2016 at 14:28
  • 3
    Related, you should use command -v <command>; not which <command>. Also see Check if a program exists from a Bash script.
    – jww
    Commented Oct 21, 2017 at 5:49
  • 7
    @DavidBaucum Not quite; running install on an already-installed package will upgrade it if it's out of date. Usually desirable to keep up-to-date for security issues, but could be surprising if stability is desired.
    – Izkata
    Commented Jan 23, 2018 at 3:55
  • 1
    @DavidBaucum: manually apt installing an already installed package will also mark it as manually installed, a very undesired side-effect if that package was previously set as automatically installed.
    – MestreLion
    Commented Jun 1, 2023 at 3:41

30 Answers 30

378

To check if packagename was installed, type:

dpkg -s <packagename>

You can also use dpkg-query that has a neater output for your purpose, and accepts wild cards, too.

dpkg-query -l <packagename>

To find what package owns the command, try:

dpkg -S `which <command>`

For further details, see article Find out if package is installed in Linux and dpkg cheat sheet.

9
  • 55
    If you as a person want this NON-programmatically you can use this information as it stands. However you can't simply rely on return codes here for scripting or the output/lack of output alone for scripting. You would have to scan the output of these commands, limiting their usefulness for this question.
    – UpAndAdam
    Commented Apr 30, 2013 at 14:39
  • 6
    Oddly enough, I've recently discovered that dpkg-query used to return 1 on a missing package, now ( Ubuntu 12.04 ) returns 0, causing all sorts of trouble on my jenkins build node setup script! dpkg -s returns 0 on package installed, and 1 on package not installed. Commented Aug 21, 2013 at 21:04
  • 27
    Hey, OP asked for if usage. I am also looking for if usage. Commented Oct 12, 2015 at 14:22
  • 2
    @Therealstubot : I'm also using Ubuntu 12.04 and dpkg -s does return 1 on missing packages and 0 otherwise, as it should. How was different on earlier (or recent) versions?
    – MestreLion
    Commented Dec 28, 2015 at 8:20
  • 8
    a note: dpkg -s returns zero if a package was installed and then removed - in that case it's Status: deinstall ok config-files or similar, so it's "ok" - so to me, this is not a safe test. dpkg-query -l doesnt seem to return a useful result in this case either.
    – keen
    Commented Sep 23, 2016 at 19:49
124

To be a little more explicit, here's a bit of Bash script that checks for a package and installs it if required. Of course, you can do other things upon finding that the package is missing, such as simply exiting with an error code.

REQUIRED_PKG="some-package"
PKG_OK=$(dpkg-query -W --showformat='${Status}\n' $REQUIRED_PKG|grep "install ok installed")
echo Checking for $REQUIRED_PKG: $PKG_OK
if [ "" = "$PKG_OK" ]; then
  echo "No $REQUIRED_PKG. Setting up $REQUIRED_PKG."
  sudo apt-get --yes install $REQUIRED_PKG
fi

If the script runs within a GUI (e.g., it is a Nautilus script), you'll probably want to replace the 'sudo' invocation with a 'gksudo' one.

7
  • 8
    --force-yes seems a poor idea. From man page: "This is a dangerous option that will cause apt-get to continue without prompting if it is doing something potentially harmful. It should not be used except in very special situations. Using --force-yes can potentially destroy your system!" Using it in a script makes it even worse. Commented Jan 28, 2018 at 11:35
  • What does ${Status} mean? Commented Feb 26, 2021 at 2:39
  • @SaladHead See man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/dpkg-query.1.html "Package information can be included [in showformat] by inserting variable references to package fields using the syntax “${field[;width]}”." Status is one of those fields.
    – Urhixidur
    Commented Jun 30, 2021 at 14:41
  • In your answer, perhaps explain how and why it works. E.g., what is the intent of -W --showformat='${Status}? What does the variable "Status" contain? Or is it literal? Why is it dpkg-query when some other answers use dpkg? Etc. (But without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today.) Commented Mar 2, 2022 at 1:37
  • 1
    This doesn't account for the possibility that the package may not exist at all. Commented May 10, 2022 at 7:58
113

This one-liner returns 1 (installed) or 0 (not installed) for the 'nano' package...

$(dpkg-query -W -f='${Status}' nano 2>/dev/null | grep -c "ok installed")

even if the package does not exist or is not available.

The example below installs the 'nano' package if it is not installed...

if [ $(dpkg-query -W -f='${Status}' nano 2>/dev/null | grep -c "ok installed") -eq 0 ];
then
  apt-get install nano;
fi
8
  • 4
    My variation on this: dpkg-query -W -f='${Status}' MYPACKAGE | grep -q -P '^install ok installed$'; echo $? Commented Aug 18, 2015 at 17:28
  • @ThorSummoner: care to explain why yours is better?
    – knocte
    Commented May 21, 2016 at 12:41
  • 1
    @knocte I'm not sure there is an argument to be made about being objectively better. Though I'm confident the verbatim post's one-liner will execute the result output, which I wouldn't want to leave dangling in an answer. The one liner I show exemplifies getting (printing) just the exit code. Commented May 23, 2016 at 16:20
  • 1
    @ThorSummoner You don't need grep -P for a simple regex like that.
    – tripleee
    Commented Jul 1, 2016 at 8:16
  • 14
    Simpler: if ! dpkg-query -W -f='${Status}' nano | grep "ok installed"; then apt install nano; fi -- No need to use grep -c, just use the exit status of grep Commented Oct 5, 2017 at 20:47
37

dpkg-query --showformat='${db:Status-Status}'

This produces a small output string which is unlikely to change and is easy to compare deterministically without grep:

pkg=hello
status="$(dpkg-query -W --showformat='${db:Status-Status}' "$pkg" 2>&1)"
if [ ! $? = 0 ] || [ ! "$status" = installed ]; then
  sudo apt install $pkg
fi

The $? = 0 check is needed because if you've never installed a package before, and after you remove certain packages such as hello, dpkg-query exits with status 1 and outputs to stderr:

dpkg-query: no packages found matching hello

instead of outputting not-installed. The 2>&1 captures that error message too when it comes preventing it from going to the terminal.

For multiple packages:

pkgs='hello certbot'
install=false
for pkg in $pkgs; do
  status="$(dpkg-query -W --showformat='${db:Status-Status}' "$pkg" 2>&1)"
  if [ ! $? = 0 ] || [ ! "$status" = installed ]; then
    install=true
    break
  fi
done
if "$install"; then
  sudo apt install $pkgs
fi

The possible statuses are documented in man dpkg-query as:

   n = Not-installed
   c = Config-files
   H = Half-installed
   U = Unpacked
   F = Half-configured
   W = Triggers-awaiting
   t = Triggers-pending
   i = Installed

The single letter versions are obtainable with db:Status-Abbrev, but they come together with the action and error status, so you get 3 characters and would need to cut it.

So I think it is reliable enough to rely on the uncapitalized statuses (Config-files vs config-files) not changing instead.

dpkg -s exit status

This unfortunately doesn't do what most users want:

pkgs='qemu-user pandoc'
if ! dpkg -s $pkgs >/dev/null 2>&1; then
  sudo apt-get install $pkgs
fi

because for some packages, e.g. certbot, doing:

sudo apt install certbot
sudo apt remove certbot

leaves certbot in state config-files, which means that config files were left in the machine. And in that state, dpkg -s still returns 0, because the package metadata is still kept around so that those config files can be handled more nicely.

To actually make dpkg -s return 1 as desired, --purge would be needed:

sudo apt remove --purge certbot

which actually moves it into not-installed/dpkg-query: no packages found matching.

Note that only certain packages leave config files behind. A simpler package like hello goes directly from installed to not-installed without --purge.

Tested on Ubuntu 20.10.

Python apt package

There is a pre-installed Python 3 package called apt in Ubuntu 18.04 which exposes an Python apt interface!

A script that checks if a package is installed and installs it if not can be seen at: How to install a package using the python-apt API

Here is a copy for reference:

#!/usr/bin/env python
# aptinstall.py

import apt
import sys

pkg_name = "libjs-yui-doc"

cache = apt.cache.Cache()
cache.update()
cache.open()

pkg = cache[pkg_name]
if pkg.is_installed:
    print "{pkg_name} already installed".format(pkg_name=pkg_name)
else:
    pkg.mark_install()

    try:
        cache.commit()
    except Exception, arg:
        print >> sys.stderr, "Sorry, package installation failed [{err}]".format(err=str(arg))

Check if an executable is in PATH instead

See: How can I check if a program exists from a Bash script?

See also

4
  • 3
    Ciro, ou can't rely on "dpkg -s" exit code. For example if you "apt installed" a package, then "apt remove" it and tried to "dpkg -s packagename" then you'll notice status: deinstall and exit code zero (as if installed). You have to parse the "dpkg -s" output bro. Commented Jan 28, 2020 at 17:22
  • 1
    @DmitryShevkoplyas thanks for the report. I could not reproduce on Ubuntu 19.10 with: sudo apt install hello; dpkg -s hello; echo $?; sudo apt remove hello; dpkg -s hello; echo $?. Can you provide further details? Commented Jan 29, 2020 at 7:58
  • 2
    indeed - for your test case with "hello" package "dpkg -s" correctly shows the package as not installed and gives expected exit code "1". But try the same instal/remove check with package "certbot", then you'll see "Status: deinstall ok config-files" as the "dpkg -s" output after your "apt remove certbot" and exit code is incorrectly shows us "0". My wrong assumption was that it is exact case for any other package, but it seems it is not the same for all, which even worse and less predictable. Parse "dpkg -s" you must (c) Yoda :) Commented Jan 29, 2020 at 15:16
  • 2
    The information that dpkg remove package-name does not result in dpkg -s package-name returning 0 is missing in most answers which almost drove me crazy. It actually results in state deinstalled instead of just not installed! Puhh, Debian is ... peculiar.
    – TNT
    Commented Jan 24, 2021 at 16:28
12

Ubuntu added its "Personal Package Archive" (PPA), and PPA packages have a different result.

  1. A native Debian repository package is not installed:

    ~$ dpkg-query -l apache-perl
    ~$ echo $?
    1
    
  2. A PPA package registered on the host and installed:

    ~$ dpkg-query -l libreoffice
    ~$ echo $?
    0
    
  3. A PPA package registered on the host, but not installed:

    ~$ dpkg-query -l domy-ce
    ~$ echo $?
    0
    ~$ sudo apt-get remove domy-ce
    [sudo] password for user:
    Reading package lists... Done
    Building dependency tree
    Reading state information... Done
    Package domy-ce is not installed, so not removed
    0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
    

Also posted on: Test if a package is installed in APT

1
  • 4
    If you install and remove a package, next you use dpkg-query package ; echo $? will be 0 also if the package is not installed.
    – Pol Hallen
    Commented Sep 22, 2017 at 21:36
8

UpAndAdam wrote:

However you can't simply rely on return codes here for scripting

In my experience you can rely on dkpg's exit codes.

The return code of dpkg -s is 0 if the package is installed and 1 if it's not, so the simplest solution I found was:

dpkg -s <pkg-name> 2>/dev/null >/dev/null || sudo apt-get -y install <pkg-name>

It works fine for me...

4
  • 13
    After apt-get remove <package>, dpkg -s <package> still returns 0, even though the package is deinstalled Commented Aug 18, 2015 at 17:32
  • @ThorSummoner: Conclusion? Commented Aug 28, 2021 at 20:01
  • Really short and to the point. Plus good explanation. Thanks rocka84 @ThorSummoner can you clarify your point? Commented Sep 3, 2022 at 11:33
  • @KasirBarati that, the return code isn't consistent for uninstalled and deinstalled packages- in both cases the software is missing, but in half the cases the return code indicates the software is missing. i think? its been a while since I've looked at this Commented Sep 4, 2022 at 21:09
7

I've settled on one based on Nultyi's answer:

MISSING=$(dpkg --get-selections $PACKAGES 2>&1 | grep -v 'install$' | awk '{ print $6 }')
# Optional check here to skip bothering with apt-get if $MISSING is empty
sudo apt-get install $MISSING

Basically, the error message from dpkg --get-selections is far easier to parse than most of the others, because it doesn't include statuses like "deinstall". It also can check multiple packages simultaneously, something you can't do with just error codes.

Explanation/example:

$ dpkg --get-selections  python3-venv python3-dev screen build-essential jq
dpkg: no packages found matching python3-venv
dpkg: no packages found matching python3-dev
screen                                          install
build-essential                                 install
dpkg: no packages found matching jq

So grep removes installed packages from the list, and awk pulls the package names out from the error message, resulting in MISSING='python3-venv python3-dev jq', which can be trivially inserted into an install command.

I'm not blindly issuing an apt-get install $PACKAGES, because as mentioned in the comments, this can unexpectedly upgrade packages you weren't planning on; not really a good idea for automated processes that are expected to be stable.

2
  • I like this solution. Concise and tests for multiple packages at once. Also, you could make the optional check something as simple as [[ ! -z $MISSING ]] && sudo apt-get install $MISSING
    – Shenk
    Commented Jan 20, 2020 at 17:37
  • Note that this will miss packages which have been installed and then removed, because the output ends with 'deinstall'. Suggest changing the grep argument to grep -v ' install$' (note the leading space)
    – RobM
    Commented Apr 6, 2022 at 14:29
6

This seems to work pretty well.

$ sudo dpkg-query -l | grep <some_package_name> | wc -l
  • It either returns 0 if not installed or some number > 0 if installed.
4
  • 10
    grep | wc -l is an antipattern. To check if something exists, you want simply grep -q. To actually count occurrences (which is rarely useful in this sort of scenario), use grep -c.
    – tripleee
    Commented Jul 1, 2016 at 8:12
  • @tripleee So, dpkg -s zip | grep -c "Package: zip"? (using zip as sample package) Commented Jun 13, 2018 at 20:33
  • @Davdriver That's not exactly what the above does but yes. In a script you probably want grep -q 'Package: zip' to return an exit code which indicates whether or not the result was found without printing anything.
    – tripleee
    Commented Jun 14, 2018 at 4:29
  • this seems working fine for uninstalled packages too
    – mehmet
    Commented Dec 3, 2018 at 21:57
6

This will do it. apt-get --no-upgrade install is idempotent.

sudo apt-get install --no-upgrade command
4
  • 10
    There are scenarios in which doing an apt-get install on a package is undesirable where the package is already installed, even though the command itself is idempotent. In my case, I'm installing a package on a remote system with Ansible's raw module, which will report the system as changed every time if I run apt-get install indiscriminately. A conditional solves that problem.
    – JBentley
    Commented Jul 28, 2016 at 17:40
  • 3
    @JBentley That's a good point. Packages that are installed as part of a dependency will get marked as manually installed, and then will not be removed when it's dependency is removed if you apt-get install it. Commented Aug 11, 2016 at 18:54
  • I think you should use apt-get install --no-upgrade package-name instead if you want idempotent behavior because plain install will upgrade the package if an upgrade is available. Commented Jul 17, 2021 at 14:40
  • Good call @MikkoRantalainen Commented Jul 18, 2021 at 2:11
5

It seems that nowadays apt-get has an option --no-upgrade that just does what the OP wants:

--no-upgrade Do not upgrade packages. When used in conjunction with install, no-upgrade will prevent packages listed from being upgraded if they are already installed.

Manpage from https://linux.die.net/man/8/apt-get

Therefore you can use

apt-get install --no-upgrade package

and package will be installed only if it's not.

5

Inspired by Chris' answer:

#! /bin/bash

installed() {
    return $(dpkg-query -W -f '${Status}\n' "${1}" 2>&1|awk '/ok installed/{print 0;exit}{print 1}')
}

pkgs=(libgl1-mesa-dev xorg-dev vulkan-tools libvulkan-dev vulkan-validationlayers-dev spirv-tools)
missing_pkgs=""

for pkg in ${pkgs[@]}; do
    if ! $(installed $pkg) ; then
        missing_pkgs+=" $pkg"
    fi
done

if [ ! -z "$missing_pkgs" ]; then
    cmd="sudo apt install -y $missing_pkgs"
    echo $cmd
fi
5

I think a one-liner is more elegant:

dpkg --verify command || sudo apt-get install command

Explanation: apt-get will only be called if dpkg fails to verify a current installation.

From the dpgk man page:

EXIT STATUS
       0   The requested action was successfully performed.  Or a check or assertion command returned true.

       1   A check or assertion command returned false.

       2   Fatal or unrecoverable error due to invalid command-line usage, or interactions with the system, such as accesses to the database, memory allocations, etc.
1
  • Loved this one liner, for most of the packages that come with a command this seems the best option.
    – Farhood ET
    Commented Jun 5, 2023 at 7:59
4

Use:

apt-cache policy <package_name>

If it is not installed, it will show:

Installed: none

Otherwise it will show:

Installed: version
4

I've found all solutions in previous answers can produce a false positive if a package is installed and then removed, yet the installation package remains on the system.

To replicate:

Install package apt-get install curl
Remove package apt-get remove curl

Now test the previous answers.

The following command seems to solve this condition:

dpkg-query -W -f='${Status}\n' curl | head -n1 | awk '{print $3;}' | grep -q '^installed$'

This will result in a definitive installed or not-installed.

3
  • 1
    not entirely, sadly - other possible results in this case are config-files - so I think a final | grep -q "installed" is really needed to get a functional exit code status.
    – keen
    Commented Sep 23, 2016 at 19:51
  • make that | grep -q '^installed$'
    – keen
    Commented Sep 23, 2016 at 20:20
  • Instead of -f='${Status}\n' and then piping to awk you can also just use -f='${db:Status-Status}\n'.
    – josch
    Commented Feb 15, 2022 at 9:38
3
$name="rsync"

[ `which $name` ] $$ echo "$name : installed" || sudo apt-get install -y $name
2
1

This feature already exists in Ubuntu and Debian, in the command-not-found package.

3
  • 17
    matt@matt-ubuntu:~$ command-not-found command-not-found: command not found ... lol. Commented May 29, 2013 at 10:54
  • 1
    command-not-found is an interactive helper, not a tool to ensure you have the dependencies you want. Of course, the proper way to declare dependencies is to package your software in a Debian package and fill in the Depends: declaration in the package's debian/control file properly.
    – tripleee
    Commented Jul 1, 2016 at 8:20
  • On Ubuntu 18.04, command-not-found is not installed by default: "command-not-found: command not found" Commented Mar 2, 2022 at 1:34
1
which <command>
if [ $? == 1 ]; then
    <pkg-manager> -y install <command>
fi
1
1

This explicitly prints 0 if installed else 1 using only awk:

dpkg-query -W -f '${Status}\n' 'PKG' 2>&1|awk '/ok installed/{print 0;exit}{print 1}'

or if you prefer the other way around where 1 means installed and 0 otherwise:

dpkg-query -W -f '${Status}\n' 'PKG' 2>&1|awk '/ok installed/{print 1;exit}{print 0}'

** replace PKG with your package name

Convenience function:

installed() {
    return $(dpkg-query -W -f '${Status}\n' "${1}" 2>&1|awk '/ok installed/{print 0;exit}{print 1}')
}


# usage:
installed gcc && echo Yes || echo No

#or

if installed gcc; then
    echo yes
else
    echo no
fi
1
  • in cause you want to add more than one pkgs #! /bin/bash installed() { return $(dpkg-query -W -f '${Status}\n' "${1}" 2>&1|awk '/ok installed/{print 0;exit}{print 1}') } pkgs=(xxx libgl1-mesa-dev yyy xorg-dev vulkan-tools libvulkan-dev vulkan-validationlayers-dev spirv-tools vulkan-tools libvulkan-dev vulkan-validationlayers-dev spirv-tools) missing_pkgs="" for pkg in ${pkgs[@]}; do if ! $(installed $pkg) ; then missing_pkgs+=" $pkg" fi done echo $missing_pkgs if [ ! -z "$missing_pkgs" ]; then cmd="sudo apt install -y $missing_pkgs" echo $cmd fi
    – FreeToGo
    Commented Feb 19, 2021 at 4:45
1

The answers that suggest to use something along the lines of:

dpkg-query --showformat '${db:Status-Status}\n' --show $package | grep -q '^installed$'
dpkg-query --showformat '${Status}\n' --show $package | grep -q '^install ok installed$'

are correct.

But if you have the package dpkg-dev installed and you do not just want to check whether a package is installed but you also:

  • want to know whether a package is installed in a certain version
  • want to have a package in a certain architecture
  • want to see if a virtual package is provided

then you can abuse the dpkg-checkbuilddeps tool for this job:

dpkg-checkbuilddeps -d apt /dev/null

This will check whether apt is installed.

The following will check whether apt is installed in at least version 2.3.15 and grep is installed as amd64 and the virtual package x-window-manager is provided by some of the installed packages:

dpkg-checkbuilddeps -d 'apt (>= 2.3.15), grep:amd64, x-window-manager' /dev/null

The exit status of dpkg-checkbuilddeps will tell the script whether the dependencies are satisfied or not. Since this method supports passing multiple packages, you only have to run dpkg-checkbuilddeps once even if you want to check whether more than one package is installed.

1

For Ubuntu, apt provides a fairly decent way to do this. Below is an example for Google Chrome:

apt -qq list google-chrome-stable 2>/dev/null | grep -qE "(installed|upgradeable)" || apt-get install google-chrome-stable

I'm redirecting error output to null, because apt warns against using its "unstable cli". I suspect list package is stable, so I think it's ok to throw this warning away. The -qq makes apt super quiet.

5
  • 2
    this won't work properly if something is "upgradable" Commented Nov 28, 2018 at 15:17
  • @PawelBarcik good point. I've updated the answer to handle that situation. Commented Nov 29, 2018 at 22:43
  • You can use apt -qq list google-chrome-stable --installed this way you will only get output if package is installed and you won't need to grep the output. Commented Aug 12, 2020 at 15:29
  • Note, that apt should not be used in scripts as its output is intended for human consumption and not for scripts, so this could break any time. For scripts there is apt-get.
    – josch
    Commented Feb 15, 2022 at 9:27
  • @josch Thanks for your comment. I mention the warning in my last paragraph. I didn't use apt-get because it didn't provide this feature. Commented Feb 15, 2022 at 18:24
1

Since you mentioned Ubuntu, and you want to do this programmatically(although dpkg variations can also be used but would be more complex to implement), this(which) will definitely work:

#!/bin/bash

pkgname=mutt
which $pkgname > /dev/null;isPackage=$?
if [ $isPackage != 0 ];then
        echo "$pkgname not installed"
        sleep 1
        read -r -p "${1:-$pkgname will be installed. Are you sure? [y/N]} " response
        case "$response" in
            [yY][eE][sS]|[yY]) 
                sudo apt-get install $pkgname
                ;;
            *)
                false
                ;;
        esac

else
        echo "$pkgname is installed"
        sleep 1
fi

Although for POSIX compatibility, you would want to use command -v instead as mentioned in another similar question.

In that case, which $pkgname > /dev/null should be replaced by command -v $pkgname in the above code sample.

1

the following is the most simplest way to whether a package is installed or not, just locate whether the package is absent using which command, disgard all errors, and check its exit status

which curl >/dev/null 2>&1
if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
    echo "curl is installed."
else
    echo "curl is not installed."
fi
0
0

This command is the most memorable:

dpkg --get-selections <package-name>

If it's installed it prints:

<package-name> install

Otherwise it prints

No packages found matching <package-name>.

This was tested on Ubuntu 12.04.1 (Precise Pangolin).

1
  • 7
    dpkg --get-selections <package-name> doesn't set the exit code to non-zero when the package is not found.
    – Lucas
    Commented Mar 5, 2014 at 17:36
0
apt list [packagename]

seems to be the simplest way to do it outside of dpkg and older apt-* tools.

1
  • 4
    It is nice for manual check, but it issues a warning telling that apt is not intended for scripting - in contrast to the apt-* tools. Commented Sep 20, 2017 at 7:31
0

I had a similar requirement when running test locally instead of in Docker. Basically I only wanted to install any .deb files found if they weren't already installed.

# If there are .deb files in the folder, then install them
if [ `ls -1 *.deb 2> /dev/null | wc -l` -gt 0 ]; then
  for file in *.deb; do
    # Only install if not already installed (non-zero exit code)
    dpkg -I ${file} | grep Package: | sed -r 's/ Package:\s+(.*)/\1/g' | xargs dpkg -s
    if [ $? != 0 ]; then
        dpkg -i ${file}
    fi;
  done;
else
  err "No .deb files found in '$PWD'"
fi

I guess the only problem I can see is that it doesn't check the version number of the package so if .deb file is a newer version. Then this wouldn't overwrite the currently installed package.

0

Kinda based off yours just a little more 'elegant'. Just because I'm bored.

#!/bin/bash
FOUND=("\033[38;5;10m")
NOTFOUND=("\033[38;5;9m")
PKG="${@:1}"
command ${PKG} &>/dev/null
if [[ $? != 0 ]]; then
    echo -e "${NOTFOUND}[!] ${PKG} not found [!]"
    echo -e "${NOTFOUND}[!] Would you like to install ${PKG} now ? [!]"
    read -p "[Y/N] >$ " ANSWER
    if [[ ${ANSWER} == [yY] || ${ANSWER} == [yY][eE][sS] ]]; then
        if grep -q "bian" /etc/os-release; then
            sudo apt-get install ${PKG}
        elif grep -q "arch" /etc/os-release; then
            if [[ -f /bin/yay ]] || [[ -f /bin/yaourt ]]; then
                yaourt -S ${PKG} 2>./err || yay -S ${PKG} 2>./err
            else
                sudo pacman -S ${PKG}
            fi
        elif grep -q "fedora" /etc/os-release; then
             sudo dnf install ${PKG}
        else
            echo -e "${NOTFOUND}[!] This script couldn't detect your package manager [!]"
            echo -e "${NOTFOUND}[!] Manually install it [!]"
        fi
    elif [[ ${ANSWER} == [nN] || ${ANSWER} == [nN][oO] ]]; then
        echo -e "${NOTFOUND}[!] Exiting [!]"
    fi
else
    echo -e "${FOUND}[+] ${PKG} found [+]"
fi
0

If your package has a command line interface you can check if the package exists before installing it by evaluating the output from calling it's command line tool.

Here's an example with a package called helm.

#!/bin/bash

# Call the command for the package silently
helm > /dev/null

# Get the exit code of the last command
command_exit_code="$(echo $?)"

# Run installation if exit code is not equal to 0
if [ "$command_exit_code" -ne "0" ]; then
    # Package does not exist: Do the package installation
else
   echo "Skipping 'helm' installation: Package already exists"
fi;
-1

I use the following way:

which mySQL 2>&1|tee 1> /dev/null
  if [[ "$?" == 0 ]]; then
                echo -e "\e[42m MySQL already installed. Moving on...\e[0m"
        else
        sudo apt-get install -y mysql-server
                if [[ "$?" == 0 ]]; then
                        echo -e "\e[42mMy SQL installed\e[0m"
                else
                        echo -e "\e[42Installation failed\e[0m"
                fi
        fi
-1

I use this solution as I find it most straightforward.

function must_install(){
   return "$(apt -qq list $var --installed 2> /dev/null |wc -l)"
}

function install_if() {
    unset install
    for var in "$@"
    do
        if $(must_install $var)
        then
            install+="${var} "
        fi
    done
    if [ -n "$install" ];
    then
        sudo apt-get install -qy $install
    fi
}

The neat thing is, must_install returns 1 or 0 which is then interpreted as true or false from the calling if, so we don't need any test using [].

install_if takes any number of packages separated by space.

The problem is apt is not meant to be used in scripts, so this might stop working at any time. 8)

-1

All the answers are good but seem to be complex for beginners like myself to understand. so here is the solution that worked for me. My Linux environment is centOS but can't confirm it works for all distributions

PACKAGE_NAME=${PACKAGE_NAME:-node}

if ! command -v $PACKAGE_NAME > /dev/null; then
    echo "Installing $PACKAGE_NAME ..."
else
    echo "$PACKAGE_NAME already installed"
fi

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