How to Install and Uninstall librte-event-octeontx23 Package on Debian 12 (Bookworm)

Last updated: November 07,2024

1. Install "librte-event-octeontx23" package

Please follow the guidance below to install librte-event-octeontx23 on Debian 12 (Bookworm)

$ sudo apt update $ sudo apt install librte-event-octeontx23

2. Uninstall "librte-event-octeontx23" package

In this section, we are going to explain the necessary steps to uninstall librte-event-octeontx23 on Debian 12 (Bookworm):

$ sudo apt remove librte-event-octeontx23 $ sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove

3. Information about the librte-event-octeontx23 package on Debian 12 (Bookworm)

Package: librte-event-octeontx23
Source: dpdk
Version: 22.11.4-1~deb12u1
Installed-Size: 264
Maintainer: Debian DPDK Maintainers
Architecture: amd64
Depends: libbsd0 (>= 0.0), libc6 (>= 2.4), libfdt1 (>= 1.6.1), libnuma1 (>= 2.0.11), librte-bus-pci23 (>= 22.11), librte-bus-vdev23 (>= 22.11), librte-common-cpt23 (>= 20.11), librte-common-octeontx23 (>= 20.11), librte-crypto-octeontx23 (>= 21.08), librte-cryptodev23 (>= 18.05), librte-eal23 (>= 22.11), librte-ethdev23 (>= 21.11), librte-eventdev23 (>= 22.11), librte-hash23 (>= 18.11), librte-kvargs23 (>= 22.11), librte-mbuf23 (>= 22.11), librte-mempool-octeontx23 (>= 22.11~rc2), librte-mempool23 (>= 22.11), librte-meter23 (>= 22.11~rc2), librte-net-octeontx23 (>= 22.11), librte-net23 (>= 22.11~rc2), librte-pci23 (>= 22.11~rc2), librte-rcu23 (>= 19.11), librte-ring23 (>= 22.11~rc2), librte-telemetry23 (>= 21.08), librte-timer23 (>= 19.08)
Conflicts: libdpdk0
Description: Data Plane Development Kit (librte-event-octeontx runtime library)
Description-md5: b1a126011e37a5677cae1f7407169277
Multi-Arch: same
Homepage: https://doc.dpdk.org/guides/eventdevs/octeontx.html
Tag: role::shared-lib
Section: libs
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/d/dpdk/librte-event-octeontx23_22.11.4-1~deb12u1_amd64.deb
Size: 44996
MD5sum: 68e150d37f9e8b281fd086e7435fa82d
SHA256: 1a83ab1aa035a9e8f75fc734a82492cc7b55e05a5e66f16e2572d368a88fe3df

5. The same packages on other Linux Distributions