How can PPAs be removed?
There are a number of options:
Use the
--remove
flag, similar to how the PPA was added:sudo add-apt-repository --remove ppa:whatever/ppa
You can also remove PPAs by deleting the
.list
files from/etc/apt/sources.list.d
directory.As a safer alternative, you can install ppa-purge:
sudo apt-get install ppa-purge
And then remove the PPA, downgrading gracefully packages it provided to packages provided by official repositories:
sudo ppa-purge ppa:whatever/ppa
Note that this will uninstall packages provided by the PPA, but not those provided by the official repositories. If you want to remove them, you should tell it to apt:
sudo apt-get purge package_name
Last but not least, you can also disable or remove PPAs from the "Software Sources" section in Ubuntu Settings with a few clicks of your mouse (no terminal needed).
Simply run apt-add-repository again with the --remove
option to remove a PPA added via the command-line, for example:
sudo apt-add-repository --remove ppa:kernel-ppa/ppa
Then update with:
sudo apt-get update
Alternately, as ppas
are stored in /etc/apt/sources.list.d
you can find the one you want to remove by entering:
ls /etc/apt/sources.list.d
Then when you have noted the name of that offending ppa (e.g. myppa.list
), you can enter:
sudo rm -i /etc/apt/sources.list.d/myppa.list
Take care with rm (hence why I have used the interactive switch so you can confirm your actions. Then run sudo apt-get update
afterwards.
This method merely removes the ppa .list
file; it does not remove any other files or sort out any other problems caused by the ppa
; for that you could use ppa-purge
after you have got your update ability back (I know you mentioned this in your question, but I am adding this point for future readers): see here for more information on ppa-purge
.
Also take into account that if you previously added the key of the repo as trusted you should remove it:
# list the trusted keys
sudo apt-key list
# remove the key
sudo apt-key del KEY_ID