Installing a .deb package on Arch - Is it possible?
Is it possible? Yes. Is it a good idea? That depends. You would only really need to do this if the application only exists as a .deb
package. It is much more likely that you can just grab the upstream source and write a simple PKGBUILD to install it with pacman.
You should also search the AUR to ensure that someone hasn't done this already.
dpkg for Arch exists. You should be able to install .deb
packages on arch, but you should also not use it instead of pacman
, so just use it for selected few packages.
The default command looks like:
# dpkg -i package.deb
Possible? Yes, but different methods exist on basis of use case.
Assumption: The debian package doesn't have an equivalent package in the Arch (or Arch based Distribution's) official repository.
Install
yay
usingpacman
:sudo pacman -S yay
Reason: yay is an AUR helper used to query & install AUR packages. In case the debian package has already been repackaged and published to the AUR by someone else.
Install the
package_name
using yay:yay -S package_name
note: replace package_name
with the name of the debian package as found in the AUR. It'll attempt to install the dependencies on it's own using pacman
.
Alternative
Assumption: The Debian package hasn't been repackaged as an Arch package in AUR yet.
Install
debtap
from AUR usingyay
:yay -S debtap
Create equivalent package using
debtap
:sudo debtap -u package_name.deb
Install using
pacman
:sudo pacman -U package_name.pkg
Not the recommended way (possibly dangerous)
This method attempts to install the package using the debian packaging format on Arch, which is not recommended due to possible danger of corrupting your installation. If using this method it is recommended to be ready with a rescue disc image of Arch & backup of the user data/space.
Install
dpkg
usingyay
:yay -S dpkg
Install the debian package using
dpkg
:sudo dpkg -i package_name.deb