119 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
119 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
# Topgrade
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[](https://travis-ci.org/r-darwish/topgrade)
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[](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/r-darwish/topgrade)
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[](https://crates.io/crates/topgrade)
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[](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/topgrade/)
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Keeping your system up to date mostly involves invoking more than a single package manager. This
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usually results in big shell one-liners saved in your shell history. Topgrade tries to solve this
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problem by detecting which tools you use and run their appropriate package managers.
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## Installation
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Arch Linux users can use the [AUR](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/topgrade/) package.
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macOS users can install topgrade via Homebrew.
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Other systems users can either use `cargo install` or use the compiled binaries from the release
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page. The compiled binaries contain a self-upgrading feature.
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Topgrade isn't guaranteed to work on Rust versions older than the latest stable release. If you
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intend to install Topgrade using Cargo then you should either install Rust using rustup or use a
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distribution which ships the latest version of Rust, such as Arch Linux.
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## Usage
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Just run `topgrade`. It will run the following steps:
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* Try to self-upgrade if compiled with this feature. On Unix systems Topgrade will also respawn
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itself if it was upgraded
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* *Linux*: Run the system package manager:
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* *Arch*: Run [yay](https://github.com/Jguer/yay) or fall back to pacman
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* *CentOS/RHEL*: Run `yum upgrade`
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* *Fedora* - Run `dnf upgrade`
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* *Debian/Ubuntu*: Run `apt update && apt dist-upgrade`
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* *Gentoo*: Run `layman -s ALL && emerge --sync -q && eix-update && emerge -uDNa world`
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* *openSUSE*: Run `zypper refresh && zypper dist-upgrade`
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* *Void*: Run `xbps-install -Su`
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* *Linux*: Run [etc-update](https://dev.gentoo.org/~zmedico/portage/doc/man/etc-update.1.html):
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* *FreeBSD*: Upgrade and audit packages
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* *Unix*: Run `brew update && brew upgrade`. This should handle both Homebrew and Linuxbrew
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* *Unix*: Run `nix upgrade-nix && nix --upgrade`.
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* *Windows*: Upgrade Powershell modules
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* *Windows*: Upgrade all [Chocolatey](https://chocolatey.org/) packages
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* *Windows*: Upgrade all [Scoop](https://scoop.sh) packages
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* Check if the following paths are tracked by Git. If so, pull them:
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* ~/.emacs.d (Should work whether you use [Spacemacs](http://spacemacs.org/) or a custom configuration)
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* ~/.zshrc
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* [~/.oh-my-zsh](https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh)
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* ~/.tmux
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* ~/.config/fish
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* ~/.config/nvim
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* ~/.vim
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* ~/.config/openbox
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* Powershell Profile
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* Custom defined paths
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* *Unix*: Run [zplug](https://github.com/zplug/zplug) update
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* *Unix*: Run [fisher](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/fisher)
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* *Unix*: Upgrade tmux plugins with [TPM](https://github.com/tmux-plugins/tpm). *Note*: Do not use
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the `-b` flag in your configuration as suggested by the TPM readme.
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* Update Rustup by running `rustup update`. This will also attempt to run `rustup self update` when Rustup is installed inside the home directory.
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* Run Cargo [install-update](https://github.com/nabijaczleweli/cargo-update)
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* Upgrade Emacs packages (You'll get a better output if you have [Paradox](https://github.com/Malabarba/paradox) installed)
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* Upgrade [OCaml packages](https://opam.ocaml.org/)
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* Upgrade [vcpkg](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg) globally installed packages
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* Upgrade Python packages installed using [pipx](https://github.com/cs01/pipx)
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* Upgrade [R globally installed packages](https://github.com/ankane/jetpack)
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* Upgrade Vim/Neovim packages. Works with the following plugin frameworks:
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* [NeoBundle](https://github.com/Shougo/neobundle.vim)
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* [Vundle](https://github.com/VundleVim/Vundle.vim)
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* [Plug](https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug)
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* Node
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* Run `yarn global update` if yarn is installed.
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* Run `npm update -g` if NPM is installed and `npm root -g` is a path inside your home directory.
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* Run `composer global update` if Composer's home directory is inside the home directory of the user.
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* Upgrade Atom packages
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* Run `gem upgrade --user-install` if `~/.gem` exists
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* *Linux*: Update Flatpak packages
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* *Linux*: Update snap packages
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* *Linux*: Run [fwupdmgr](https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd) to show firmware upgrade. (View
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only. No upgrades will actually be performed)
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* Run custom defined commands
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* Final stage
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* *Linux*: Run [needrestart](https://github.com/liske/needrestart)
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* *Windows*: Run Windows Update (You'll have to install [PSWindowsUpdate](https://marckean.com/2016/06/01/use-powershell-to-install-windows-updates/))
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* *macOS*: Upgrade App Store applications
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* *FreeBSD*: Run `freebsd-upgrade`
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## Flags
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* `-t/--tmux` - Topgrade will launch itself in a new tmux session. This flag has no effect if
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Topgrade already runs inside tmux. This is useful when using topgrade on remote systems.
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* `-c/--cleanup` - Topgrade will instruct package managers to remove old or unused files
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* `-n/--dry-run` - Print what should be run.
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* `--no-system` - Skip the system upgrade phase.
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* `--no-git-repos` - Don't pull custom git repositories.
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* `--no-emacs` - Don't upgrade Emacs packages or configuration files.
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## Customization
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You can place a configuration file at `~/.config/topgrade.toml` (on macOS `~/Library/Preferences/topgrade.toml`).. Here's an example:
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``` toml
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git_repos = [
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"~/dev/topgrade",
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]
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[pre_commands]
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"Emacs Snapshot" = "rm -rf ~/.emacs.d/elpa.bak && cp -rl ~/.emacs.d/elpa ~/.emacs.d/elpa.bak"
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[commands]
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"Python Environment" = "~/dev/.env/bin/pip install -i https://pypi.python.org/simple -U --upgrade-strategy eager jupyter"
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```
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* `git_repos` - A list of custom Git repositories to pull
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* `pre_commands` - Commands to execute before starting any action. If any command fails, Topgrade
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will not proceed
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* `commands` - Custom upgrade steps. If any command fails it will be reported in the summary as all
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upgrade steps are reported, but it will not cause Topgrade to stop.
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