How to uninstall a program that was not installed using the package manager on Linux Mint?












2















So, I installed Canto Atom/RSS reader using the source from the official website, but it was throwing me errors so I installed it using apt-get (this worked).



Now, I want to uninstall the original but I dont know how, as there is no make file so I cannot do make uninstall, there's only setup.py and it only has options to build or install. How do I remove it from my system?



I'm running Linux Mint 14 64-bit, btw.










share|improve this question





























    2















    So, I installed Canto Atom/RSS reader using the source from the official website, but it was throwing me errors so I installed it using apt-get (this worked).



    Now, I want to uninstall the original but I dont know how, as there is no make file so I cannot do make uninstall, there's only setup.py and it only has options to build or install. How do I remove it from my system?



    I'm running Linux Mint 14 64-bit, btw.










    share|improve this question



























      2












      2








      2








      So, I installed Canto Atom/RSS reader using the source from the official website, but it was throwing me errors so I installed it using apt-get (this worked).



      Now, I want to uninstall the original but I dont know how, as there is no make file so I cannot do make uninstall, there's only setup.py and it only has options to build or install. How do I remove it from my system?



      I'm running Linux Mint 14 64-bit, btw.










      share|improve this question
















      So, I installed Canto Atom/RSS reader using the source from the official website, but it was throwing me errors so I installed it using apt-get (this worked).



      Now, I want to uninstall the original but I dont know how, as there is no make file so I cannot do make uninstall, there's only setup.py and it only has options to build or install. How do I remove it from my system?



      I'm running Linux Mint 14 64-bit, btw.







      python linux-mint uninstall apt-get source-code






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 26 at 0:42









      JakeGould

      32.1k1098141




      32.1k1098141










      asked Feb 5 '13 at 1:19









      b-vigilanTb-vigilanT

      8418




      8418






















          1 Answer
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          1














          I know this is an old question, but the solution is something I was looking for at one point in the past for ImageMagick I installed from source on Ubuntu, so I will share what I learned, from my experience.



          The key: Build your own .deb package as a part of the install process using checkinstall. As the official Ubuntu checkinstall page explains:




          CheckInstall keeps track of all files installed by a "make install" or equivalent, creates a Slackware, RPM, or Debian package with those files, and adds it to the installed packages database, allowing for easy package removal or distribution.




          So knowing that, let’s install checkinstall like this:



          sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall


          Note I am adding build-essential to the mix to ensure your compiling environment is solid.



          Now, run this command to install all of the dependencies—libraries and such—needed by Canto:



          sudo apt-get build-dep canto


          Once that is done, download the Canto source code of the exact version you want to remove and then build the binary from the source by running ./configure like this:



          ./configure


          But instead of the next typical steps of make and sudo make install run this command instead:



          sudo checkinstall


          That will build the .deb package and install Canto again. Don’t panic! When that install is done, look at the final output and it should say something like:



          You can remove it from your system anytime using:

          sudo dpkg -r canto-1.2.3


          And there you go! You can remove Canto! And this works for most any source code compiled on a Debian setup such as Linux Mint.



          If this can’t help the original post 6+ years later, I hope this helps someone else who comes across this!






          share|improve this answer























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            1 Answer
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            1 Answer
            1






            active

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            active

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            active

            oldest

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            1














            I know this is an old question, but the solution is something I was looking for at one point in the past for ImageMagick I installed from source on Ubuntu, so I will share what I learned, from my experience.



            The key: Build your own .deb package as a part of the install process using checkinstall. As the official Ubuntu checkinstall page explains:




            CheckInstall keeps track of all files installed by a "make install" or equivalent, creates a Slackware, RPM, or Debian package with those files, and adds it to the installed packages database, allowing for easy package removal or distribution.




            So knowing that, let’s install checkinstall like this:



            sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall


            Note I am adding build-essential to the mix to ensure your compiling environment is solid.



            Now, run this command to install all of the dependencies—libraries and such—needed by Canto:



            sudo apt-get build-dep canto


            Once that is done, download the Canto source code of the exact version you want to remove and then build the binary from the source by running ./configure like this:



            ./configure


            But instead of the next typical steps of make and sudo make install run this command instead:



            sudo checkinstall


            That will build the .deb package and install Canto again. Don’t panic! When that install is done, look at the final output and it should say something like:



            You can remove it from your system anytime using:

            sudo dpkg -r canto-1.2.3


            And there you go! You can remove Canto! And this works for most any source code compiled on a Debian setup such as Linux Mint.



            If this can’t help the original post 6+ years later, I hope this helps someone else who comes across this!






            share|improve this answer




























              1














              I know this is an old question, but the solution is something I was looking for at one point in the past for ImageMagick I installed from source on Ubuntu, so I will share what I learned, from my experience.



              The key: Build your own .deb package as a part of the install process using checkinstall. As the official Ubuntu checkinstall page explains:




              CheckInstall keeps track of all files installed by a "make install" or equivalent, creates a Slackware, RPM, or Debian package with those files, and adds it to the installed packages database, allowing for easy package removal or distribution.




              So knowing that, let’s install checkinstall like this:



              sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall


              Note I am adding build-essential to the mix to ensure your compiling environment is solid.



              Now, run this command to install all of the dependencies—libraries and such—needed by Canto:



              sudo apt-get build-dep canto


              Once that is done, download the Canto source code of the exact version you want to remove and then build the binary from the source by running ./configure like this:



              ./configure


              But instead of the next typical steps of make and sudo make install run this command instead:



              sudo checkinstall


              That will build the .deb package and install Canto again. Don’t panic! When that install is done, look at the final output and it should say something like:



              You can remove it from your system anytime using:

              sudo dpkg -r canto-1.2.3


              And there you go! You can remove Canto! And this works for most any source code compiled on a Debian setup such as Linux Mint.



              If this can’t help the original post 6+ years later, I hope this helps someone else who comes across this!






              share|improve this answer


























                1












                1








                1







                I know this is an old question, but the solution is something I was looking for at one point in the past for ImageMagick I installed from source on Ubuntu, so I will share what I learned, from my experience.



                The key: Build your own .deb package as a part of the install process using checkinstall. As the official Ubuntu checkinstall page explains:




                CheckInstall keeps track of all files installed by a "make install" or equivalent, creates a Slackware, RPM, or Debian package with those files, and adds it to the installed packages database, allowing for easy package removal or distribution.




                So knowing that, let’s install checkinstall like this:



                sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall


                Note I am adding build-essential to the mix to ensure your compiling environment is solid.



                Now, run this command to install all of the dependencies—libraries and such—needed by Canto:



                sudo apt-get build-dep canto


                Once that is done, download the Canto source code of the exact version you want to remove and then build the binary from the source by running ./configure like this:



                ./configure


                But instead of the next typical steps of make and sudo make install run this command instead:



                sudo checkinstall


                That will build the .deb package and install Canto again. Don’t panic! When that install is done, look at the final output and it should say something like:



                You can remove it from your system anytime using:

                sudo dpkg -r canto-1.2.3


                And there you go! You can remove Canto! And this works for most any source code compiled on a Debian setup such as Linux Mint.



                If this can’t help the original post 6+ years later, I hope this helps someone else who comes across this!






                share|improve this answer













                I know this is an old question, but the solution is something I was looking for at one point in the past for ImageMagick I installed from source on Ubuntu, so I will share what I learned, from my experience.



                The key: Build your own .deb package as a part of the install process using checkinstall. As the official Ubuntu checkinstall page explains:




                CheckInstall keeps track of all files installed by a "make install" or equivalent, creates a Slackware, RPM, or Debian package with those files, and adds it to the installed packages database, allowing for easy package removal or distribution.




                So knowing that, let’s install checkinstall like this:



                sudo apt-get install build-essential checkinstall


                Note I am adding build-essential to the mix to ensure your compiling environment is solid.



                Now, run this command to install all of the dependencies—libraries and such—needed by Canto:



                sudo apt-get build-dep canto


                Once that is done, download the Canto source code of the exact version you want to remove and then build the binary from the source by running ./configure like this:



                ./configure


                But instead of the next typical steps of make and sudo make install run this command instead:



                sudo checkinstall


                That will build the .deb package and install Canto again. Don’t panic! When that install is done, look at the final output and it should say something like:



                You can remove it from your system anytime using:

                sudo dpkg -r canto-1.2.3


                And there you go! You can remove Canto! And this works for most any source code compiled on a Debian setup such as Linux Mint.



                If this can’t help the original post 6+ years later, I hope this helps someone else who comes across this!







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Jan 26 at 0:41









                JakeGouldJakeGould

                32.1k1098141




                32.1k1098141






























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