Linux apropos Command Tutorial for Beginners (5 Examples)

In Linux, if you ever need help regarding a command, all you need to do is to open its man page. But what if a situation arises wherein the requirement is to quickly search the names and descriptions of all available man pages? Well, Linux has got your covered, as there exists a command dubbed apropos that does exactly this for you.

In this tutorial, we will discuss the basics of apropos using some easy to understand examples. But before we do that, it’s worth mentioning that all examples here have been tested on an Ubuntu 16.04 LTS machine.

The apropos command searches manual page names and descriptions for a user-supplied keyword. Following is its syntax:

apropos [OPTIONS] keyword …

And here’s what the tool’s man page says about it:

 Each manual page has a short description available within it.   apropos
       searches the descriptions for instances of keyword.

       keyword  is  usually  a regular expression, as if (-r) was used, or may
       contain wildcards (-w), or match the exact keyword (-e).   Using  these
       options,  it  may  be  necessary to quote the keyword or escape (\) the
       special characters to stop the shell from interpreting them.

       The standard matching rules allow matches to be made against  the  page
       name and word boundaries in the description.

       The  database  searched  by  apropos  is  updated by the mandb program.
       Depending on your installation, this may be run by a periodic cron job,
       or  may  need  to  be  run  manually  after  new manual pages have been
       installed.

Following are some Q&A-styled examples that should give you a good idea on how the apropos command works.

Q1. How to use apropos?

Basic usage is simple. Just pass the keyword you want to search as input to the apropos command.

For example:

apropos dmesg

produced the following result:

dmesg (1)            - print or control the kernel ring buffer

Of course, you can pass multiple keywords as well.

For example:

apropos dmesg whereis

Following is the output in this case:

dmesg (1)            - print or control the kernel ring buffer
whereis (1)          - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a...

Q2. How to make apropos search for exact keywords?

By default, the input you pass to the apropos command isn’t searched exactly. For example, if you pass ‘who’ as an input, you’ll also see the tool producing results containing words like ‘whoami’.

How to make apropos search for exact keywords

So this isn’t an exact search. However, you can force apropos to search for exact keywords by using the -e or –exact command line options.

apropos exact search

So now you see that only those entries that exactly match ‘who’ were displayed in the output.

Q3. How to make apropos display entries matching all keywords?

If you pass multiple keywords as input to the apropos command, the tool will output entries that match/contain at least one of the keywords. However, if you want apropos to produce only those entries that match/contain all keywords, then use the -a command line option.

For example, here’s the output of an apropos command without the -a option:

How to make apropos display entries matching all keywords

And here’s the output with -a option enabled:

apropos -a

Q4. How to force apropos to not trim output?

As you’d have seen in output in previous Q&As, the tool trims entries if they are too long. For example, see the highlighted line in the following output:

How to force apropos to not trim output

However, if you want, you can force apropos to produce complete lines in output, something which you can do using the -l command line option.

force apropos to produce complete lines in output

Q5. How to interpret apropos exit status?

The apropos command produces four different exit status: 0, 1, 2, and 16. Here’s what each of these represents:

 0      Successful program execution.

       1      Usage, syntax or configuration file error.

       2      Operational error.

       16     Nothing was found that matched the criteria specified

Conclusion

Depending on your work profile, you might not require the apropos command on daily basis, but as you’d have understood by now, it could be a lifesaver in certain situations. We’ve discussed some use command line options here. To know more about the tool, head to its man page.

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