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Topgrade
Keeping your system up to date mostly involves invoking more than a single package manager. This usually results in big shell one-liners saved in your shell history. Topgrade tries to solve this problem by detecting which tools you use and run their appropriate package managers.
Installation
Arch Linux users can use the AUR package.
Other systems users can either use cargo install
or use the compiled binaries from the release page.
Usage
Just run topgrade
. It will run the following steps:
- Run the system package manager:
- Arch: Run yay or fall back to pacman
- CentOS/RHEL: Run
yum upgrade
- Fedora - Run
dnf upgrade
- Debian/Ubuntu: Run
apt update && apt dist-upgrade
- macOS: Run
brew update && brew upgrade
- Check if the following paths are tracked by Git. If so, pull them:
- ~/.emacs.d (Should work whether you use Spacemacs or a custom configuration)
- ~/.zshrc
- ~/.oh-my-zsh
- ~/.tmux
- ~/.config/fish/config.fish
- Custom defined paths
- Unix: Run zplug update
- Unix: Upgrade tmux plugins with TPM
- Run Cargo install-update
- Upgrade Emacs packages
- Upgrade Vim packages. Works with the following plugin frameworks:
- Upgrade NPM globally installed packages
- Upgrade Atom packages
- Linux: Update Flatpak packages
- Linux: Update snap packages
- Linux: Run fwupdmgr to show firmware upgrade. (View only. No upgrades will actually be performed)
- Run custom defined commands
- Final stage
- Linux: Run needrestart
- macOS: Upgrade App Store applications
Customization
You can place a configuration file at ~/.config/topgrade.toml
. Here's an example:
= [
"~/dev/topgrade",
]
[]
= "~/dev/.env/bin/pip install -i https://pypi.python.org/simple -U --upgrade-strategy eager jupyter"