Ubuntu14.04LTS comes pre-installed with a new ATP tool of version 0.9.15 to install and manage DEB-based packages. One of the new features is the addition of the & ldquo; progress bar & rdquo; function for Terminal, which I personally feel a little closer to YUM. Although many of my friends think this & ldquo; progress bar & rdquo; seems redundant, I personally think this refined improvement is very humane. If you have
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS comes pre-installed with a new ATP tool of version 0.9.15 to install and manage DEB-based packages. One of the new features is the addition of the "progress bar" function for Terminal, which I personally feel a little closer to YUM.
Although many of my friends think that this "progress bar" seems redundant, I personally think this refined improvement is very humane. If you have installed a large number of software in Terminal, such as upgrading the Ubuntu version, the "progress bar" display is much more convenient than the full screen command.
The progress bar is displayed at the bottom of the Terminal interface to display the overall progress of the APT-command:
Enable progress bar display in Ubuntu 14.04 LTS:
By default, Ubuntu 14.04 does not display the progress bar of the ATP command on the terminal. to enable this new function, you need to use the administrator privilege to change the configuration file of the ATP, the simplest method is to execute the following command:
Echo 'dpkg: Progress-Fancy "1"; '>/etc/apt. conf. d/99 progressbar
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