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1119 of 19 results
347.

The find command queries the store for available packages in the stable channel.

With the --private flag, which requires the user to be logged-in to the store
(see 'snap help login'), it instead searches for private snaps that the user
has developer access to, either directly or through the store's collaboration
feature.
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352.

The install command installs the named snaps in the system.

With no further options, the snaps are installed tracking the stable channel,
with strict security confinement.

Revision choice via the --revision override requires the the user to
have developer access to the snap, either directly or through the
store's collaboration feature, and to be logged in (see 'snap help login').

Note a later refresh will typically undo a revision override, taking the snap
back to the current revision of the channel it's tracking.
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354.

The interfaces command lists interfaces available in the system.

By default all slots and plugs, used and offered by all snaps, are displayed.

$ snap interfaces <snap>:<slot or plug>

Lists only the specified slot or plug.

$ snap interfaces <snap>

Lists the slots offered and plugs used by the specified snap.

$ snap interfaces -i=<interface> [<snap>]

Filters the complete output so only plugs and/or slots matching the provided
details are listed.
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357.

The list command displays a summary of snaps installed in the current system.
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362.

The pack command packs the given snap-dir as a snap and writes the result to
target-dir. If target-dir is omitted, the result is written to current
directory. If both source-dir and target-dir are omitted, the pack command packs
the current directory.

When used with --check-skeleton, pack only checks whether snap-dir contains
valid snap metadata and raises an error otherwise. Application commands listed
in snap metadata file, but appearing with incorrect permission bits result in an
error. Commands that are missing from snap-dir are listed in diagnostic
messages.
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364.

The prepare-image command performs some of the steps necessary for creating
core device images.
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367.

The remove command removes the named snap from the system.

By default all the snap revisions are removed, including their data and the
common data directory. When a --revision option is passed only the specified
revision is removed.
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394.

snap %q not found in the given context.
Please use 'snap info %[1]s' to list available releases.
TRANSLATORS: %q and %[1]s refer to the same thing (a snap name).
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489.
unknown command %q, see 'snap help'
(no translation yet)
1119 of 19 results

This translation is managed by Ubuntu Afrikaans Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: Bernard Stafford, Jurgens J Schoeman.