How i can remove ghdl 0.29 from Debian?












1















I follow this steps to install GHDL compiler in my Debian, but now I need to uninstall this compiler to install x64 version, and I can't.



By downloading the binaries and unpacking them manually:

$ wget http://ghdl.free.fr/site/uploads/Main/ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar

$ sudo tar xvf ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar


(This generates the file ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2)



 $ cd ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux

$ sudo tar -C / -jxvf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2


(This copy the files to /usr/local/bin and /usr/local/lib)



I have used dpkg --purge ghdl, but if I use ghdl --version, the ghdl 0.29 still in the system.



How can I remove it?










share|improve this question





























    1















    I follow this steps to install GHDL compiler in my Debian, but now I need to uninstall this compiler to install x64 version, and I can't.



    By downloading the binaries and unpacking them manually:

    $ wget http://ghdl.free.fr/site/uploads/Main/ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar

    $ sudo tar xvf ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar


    (This generates the file ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2)



     $ cd ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux

    $ sudo tar -C / -jxvf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2


    (This copy the files to /usr/local/bin and /usr/local/lib)



    I have used dpkg --purge ghdl, but if I use ghdl --version, the ghdl 0.29 still in the system.



    How can I remove it?










    share|improve this question



























      1












      1








      1








      I follow this steps to install GHDL compiler in my Debian, but now I need to uninstall this compiler to install x64 version, and I can't.



      By downloading the binaries and unpacking them manually:

      $ wget http://ghdl.free.fr/site/uploads/Main/ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar

      $ sudo tar xvf ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar


      (This generates the file ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2)



       $ cd ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux

      $ sudo tar -C / -jxvf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2


      (This copy the files to /usr/local/bin and /usr/local/lib)



      I have used dpkg --purge ghdl, but if I use ghdl --version, the ghdl 0.29 still in the system.



      How can I remove it?










      share|improve this question
















      I follow this steps to install GHDL compiler in my Debian, but now I need to uninstall this compiler to install x64 version, and I can't.



      By downloading the binaries and unpacking them manually:

      $ wget http://ghdl.free.fr/site/uploads/Main/ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar

      $ sudo tar xvf ghdl-i686-linux-latest.tar


      (This generates the file ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2)



       $ cd ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux

      $ sudo tar -C / -jxvf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2


      (This copy the files to /usr/local/bin and /usr/local/lib)



      I have used dpkg --purge ghdl, but if I use ghdl --version, the ghdl 0.29 still in the system.



      How can I remove it?







      linux debian ghdl






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 12 '16 at 16:24







      SkyWorker

















      asked Nov 11 '16 at 21:24









      SkyWorkerSkyWorker

      63




      63
























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          faced the same situation and this is how i did it:



          goto where your tarball is and use this command



          sudo tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 | sed 's/^..//' | parallel sudo rm -rf


          explanation:





          • tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 List all files in archive.tar


          • sed 's/^..//' Removes initial directory characters


          • parallel sudo rm -rf removes matching files


          this will leave some empty directories at /usr/local and if you want to get rid of them you can use



          sudo find /usr/local/* -type d -empty -delete





          share|improve this answer























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            0














            faced the same situation and this is how i did it:



            goto where your tarball is and use this command



            sudo tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 | sed 's/^..//' | parallel sudo rm -rf


            explanation:





            • tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 List all files in archive.tar


            • sed 's/^..//' Removes initial directory characters


            • parallel sudo rm -rf removes matching files


            this will leave some empty directories at /usr/local and if you want to get rid of them you can use



            sudo find /usr/local/* -type d -empty -delete





            share|improve this answer




























              0














              faced the same situation and this is how i did it:



              goto where your tarball is and use this command



              sudo tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 | sed 's/^..//' | parallel sudo rm -rf


              explanation:





              • tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 List all files in archive.tar


              • sed 's/^..//' Removes initial directory characters


              • parallel sudo rm -rf removes matching files


              this will leave some empty directories at /usr/local and if you want to get rid of them you can use



              sudo find /usr/local/* -type d -empty -delete





              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                faced the same situation and this is how i did it:



                goto where your tarball is and use this command



                sudo tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 | sed 's/^..//' | parallel sudo rm -rf


                explanation:





                • tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 List all files in archive.tar


                • sed 's/^..//' Removes initial directory characters


                • parallel sudo rm -rf removes matching files


                this will leave some empty directories at /usr/local and if you want to get rid of them you can use



                sudo find /usr/local/* -type d -empty -delete





                share|improve this answer













                faced the same situation and this is how i did it:



                goto where your tarball is and use this command



                sudo tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 | sed 's/^..//' | parallel sudo rm -rf


                explanation:





                • tar -tf ghdl-0.29-i686-pc-linux.tar.bz2 List all files in archive.tar


                • sed 's/^..//' Removes initial directory characters


                • parallel sudo rm -rf removes matching files


                this will leave some empty directories at /usr/local and if you want to get rid of them you can use



                sudo find /usr/local/* -type d -empty -delete






                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 22 '18 at 22:02









                spazspaz

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