This post describes how to reinstall a package in Ubuntu (or Linut Mint, or other Ubuntu derivatives, and possibly on Debian, but I did not test it).
I needed to remove a package that was installed in the system which came from a non-standard repository. However there were many others that depended on it, so I could not simply remove it.
It wasn't practical to remove them all, but I needed to replace the package with a version from the official Ubuntu repository.
This is the way I found to do it. I found the answer in this post:
First, check available versions to be able to force a particular one:
apt-cache madison libbrotli1
This provides a list of available packages similar to this:
libbrotli1 | 1.0.3-1ubuntu1.2 | http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-updates/main amd64 Packages
libbrotli1 | 1.0.3-1ubuntu1.2 | http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic-security/main amd64 Packages
libbrotli1 | 1.0.3-1ubuntu1 | http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/universe amd64 Packages
Then, to reinstall indicating a particular version, issue the following command:
apt-get install --reinstall
libbrotli1=1.0.3-1ubuntu1.2
This will reinstall libbrotli1
without having to remove and reinstall all packages that depend on it.
2018-12-17
Ubuntu: force reinstallation of package in ubuntu
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