PKG-UPGRADE(8) BSD System Manager's Manual PKG-UPGRADE(8)NAME
pkg upgrade — perform upgrades of package software distributions
SYNOPSIS
pkg upgrade [-fInFqUy] [-r reponame] [-Cgix]
[<pkg-origin|pkg-name|pkg-name-version> ...]
pkg upgrade [--{force,no-install-scripts,dry-run,fetch-only}]
[--{quiet,no-repo-update,yes}] [--repository reponame]
[--{case-sensitive,glob,case-insensitive,regex}]
[<pkg-origin|pkg-name|pkg-name-version> ...]
DESCRIPTION
pkg upgrade is used for upgrading packaged software distributions.
pkg upgrade compares the versions of all or specific packages installed
on the system to what is available in the configured package reposito‐
ries. Any out of date packages are added to a work list for processing.
The difference to pkg-install(8) is that pkg upgrade tries to upgrade
dependencies of packages matched as well while pkg-install(8) is more
conservative during dependencies upgrade. Moreover, pkg upgrade will not
install new packages, except as required to fulfil dependencies of the
packages listed on the command line. A caller should ensure that pat‐
terns specified as arguments have installed candidates for matching. If
the -f (force) flag is given, all installed packages are added to the
work list.
The package metadata downloaded from the repositories is then examined
for each of the packages in the work list, and any missing dependencies
are added to the work list as install jobs. Such implicitly added pack‐
ages are flagged as candidates for autoremoval. See pkg-autoremove(8)
for details.
Autoremoval flags are sticky, and will persist over reinstallation or
upgrade of the packages concerned, even if subsequently the packages are
named explicitly on a command line. See pkg-query(8) for finding the
autoremoval status of a package, and pkg-set(8) for modifying it.
Where a package on the work list supplies a shared library, and that
library has been updated, all packages requiring that shared library will
also be added to the work list as reinstallation jobs.
The work list is sorted into dependency order and pkg upgrade will
present it to the user for approval before proceeding, unless overridden
by the -y option or the ASSUME_ALWAYS_YES setting in pkg.conf.
Packages are fetched from the repositories into the local package cache
if they are not already present, or if the checksum of the cached package
file differs from the one in the repository. Packages may be downloaded
from any of the repositories mentioned in pkg.conf(5) or in the files in
/usr/local/etc/pkg/repo. See pkg-repository(5) for details.
Package repository catalogues will be automatically updated whenever pkg
upgrade is run by a user ID with write access to the package database,
unless disabled by the -U flag or setting REPO_AUTOUPDATE to NO in
pkg.conf(5).
Finally, the work list is executed in dependency order. Package rein‐
stall or update jobs are processed by removing the currently installed
package and immediately installing the replacement. New dependencies are
processed as installation jobs as part of the work list.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported by pkg upgrade:
-C, --case-sensitive
Make the standard or the regular expression (-x) matching
against pkg-name case sensitive.
-F, --fetch-only
Do not perform installation of packages, merely fetch pack‐
ages that should be upgraded and detect possible conflicts.
-f, --force
Force the reinstallation or upgrade of the whole set of pack‐
ages.
-g, --glob Treat the package names as shell glob patterns.
-I, --no-install-scripts
If any installation scripts (pre-install or post-install) or
deinstallation scripts (pre-deinstall or post-deinstall)
exist for a given package, do not execute them.
-i, --case-insensitive
Make the standard or the regular expression (-x) matching
against pkg-name case insensitive. This is the default,
unless modified by setting CASE_SENSITIVE_MATCH to true in
pkg.conf.
-n, --dry-run
Dry-run mode: show what packages have updates available, but
do not perform any upgrades. Repository catalogues will be
updated as usual unless the -U option is also given.
-q, --quiet
Force quiet output, except when -n is used, where a summary
of the work list is always displayed.
-r reponame, --repository reponame
Install packages from only the named repository, irrespective
of the configured “active” status from repo.conf.
-U, --no-repo-update
Suppress the automatic update of the local copy of the repos‐
itory catalogue from remote. Automatic repository catalogue
updates are only attempted when the effective UID of the
process has write access to the package database. Otherwise
they are silently ignored.
-y, --yes Assume yes when asked for confirmation before package instal‐
lation.
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables affect the execution of pkg upgrade.
See pkg.conf(5) for further description.
DEFAULT_ALWAYS_YES
ASSUME_ALWAYS_YES
HANDLE_RC_SCRIPTS
PKG_CACHEDIR
PKG_DBDIR
REPO_AUTOUPDATE
FILES
See pkg.conf(5).
SEE ALSOpkg_printf(3), pkg_repos(3), pkg-repository(5), pkg.conf(5), pkg(8),
pkg-add(8), pkg-annotate(8), pkg-audit(8), pkg-autoremove(8),
pkg-backup(8), pkg-check(8), pkg-clean(8), pkg-config(8), pkg-convert(8),
pkg-create(8), pkg-delete(8), pkg-fetch(8), pkg-info(8), pkg-install(8),
pkg-lock(8), pkg-query(8), pkg-register(8), pkg-repo(8), pkg-rquery(8),
pkg-search(8), pkg-set(8), pkg-shell(8), pkg-shlib(8), pkg-ssh(8),
pkg-stats(8), pkg-update(8), pkg-updating(8), pkg-version(8),
pkg-which(8)BSD April 17, 2015 BSD