dnf-automatic(8) — Linux manual page
DNF-AUTOMATIC(8) DNF DNF-AUTOMATIC(8)
NAME
dnf-automatic - DNF Automatic
SYNOPSIS
dnf-automatic [<config file>]
DESCRIPTION
Alternative CLI to dnf upgrade with specific facilities to make
it suitable to be executed automatically and regularly from
systemd timers, cron jobs and similar.
The operation of the tool is usually controlled by the
configuration file or the function-specific timer units (see
below). The command only accepts a single optional argument
pointing to the config file, and some control arguments intended
for use by the services that back the timer units. If no
configuration file is passed from the command line,
/etc/dnf/automatic.conf is used.
The tool synchronizes package metadata as needed and then checks
for updates available for the given system and then either exits,
downloads the packages or downloads and applies the packages. The
outcome of the operation is then reported by a selected
mechanism, for instance via the standard output, email or MOTD
messages.
The systemd timer unit dnf-automatic.timer will behave as the
configuration file specifies (see below) with regard to whether
to download and apply updates. Some other timer units are
provided which override the configuration file with some standard
behaviours:
• dnf-automatic-notifyonly
• dnf-automatic-download
• dnf-automatic-install
Regardless of the configuration file settings, the first will
only notify of available updates. The second will download, but
not install them. The third will download and install them.
RUN DNF-AUTOMATIC
You can select one that most closely fits your needs, customize
/etc/dnf/automatic.conf for any specific behaviors, and enable
the timer unit.
For example: systemctl enable --now
dnf-automatic-notifyonly.timer
CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT
The configuration file is separated into topical sections.
[commands] section
Setting the mode of operation of the program.
apply_updates
boolean, default: False
Whether packages comprising the available updates should
be applied by dnf-automatic.timer, i.e. installed via RPM.
Implies download_updates. Note that if this is set to
False, downloaded packages will be left in the cache till
the next successful DNF transaction. Note that the other
timer units override this setting.
download_updates
boolean, default: False
Whether packages comprising the available updates should
be downloaded by dnf-automatic.timer. Note that the other
timer units override this setting.
network_online_timeout
time in seconds, default: 60
Maximal time dnf-automatic will wait until the system is
online. 0 means that network availability detection will
be skipped.
random_sleep
time in seconds, default: 0
Maximal random delay before downloading. Note that, by
default, the systemd timers also apply a random delay of
up to 1 hour.
upgrade_type
either one of default, security, default: default
What kind of upgrades to look at. default signals looking
for all available updates, security only those with an
issued security advisory.
reboot either one of never, when-changed, when-needed, default:
never
When the system should reboot following upgrades. never
does not reboot the system. when-changed triggers a reboot
after any upgrade. when-needed triggers a reboot only when
rebooting is necessary to apply changes, such as when
systemd or the kernel is upgraded.
reboot_command
string, default: shutdown -r +5 'Rebooting after applying
package updates'
Specify the command to run to trigger a reboot of the
system. For example, to skip the 5-minute delay and wall
message, use shutdown -r
[emitters] section
Choosing how the results should be reported.
emit_via
list, default: email, stdio, motd
List of emitters to report the results through. Available
emitters are stdio to print the result to standard output,
command to send the result to a custom command,
command_email to send an email using a command, and email
to send the report via email and motd sends the result to
/etc/motd file.
system_name
string, default: hostname of the given system
How the system is called in the reports.
send_error_messages
boolean, default: False
Invokes emitters when an error occurs.
[command] section
The command emitter configuration. Variables usable in format
string arguments are body with the message body.
command_format
format string, default: cat
The shell command to execute.
stdin_format
format string, default: {body}
The data to pass to the command on stdin.
[command_email] section
The command email emitter configuration. Variables usable in
format string arguments are body with message body, subject with
email subject, email_from with the "From:" address and email_to
with a space-separated list of recipients.
command_format
format string, default: mail -Ssendwait -s {subject} -r
{email_from} {email_to}
The shell command to execute.
email_from
string, default: root
Message's "From:" address.
email_to
list, default: root
List of recipients of the message.
stdin_format
format string, default: {body}
The data to pass to the command on stdin.
[email] section
The email emitter configuration.
email_from
string, default: root
Message's "From:" address.
email_host
string, default: localhost
Hostname of the SMTP server used to send the message.
email_port
integer, default: 25
Port number to connect to at the SMTP server.
email_tls
either one of no, yes, starttls, default: no
Whether to use TLS, STARTTLS or no encryption to connect
to the SMTP server.
email_to
list, default: root
List of recipients of the message.
[base] section
Can be used to override settings from DNF's main configuration
file. See DNF Configuration Reference.
AUTHOR
See AUTHORS in DNF source distribution.
COPYRIGHT
2012-2020, Red Hat, Licensed under GPLv2+
COLOPHON
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