Support for YUM
New in version 0.17.0.
Returns a dict containing the following information for each specified package:
The fromrepo, enablerepo, and disablerepo arguments are supported, as used in pkg states.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.check_db <package1> <package2> <package3>
salt '*' pkg.check_db <package1> <package2> <package3> fromrepo=epel-testing
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Cleans local yum metadata. Functionally identical to refresh_db().
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.clean_metadata
Delete a repo from <basedir> (default basedir: /etc/yum.repos.d).
If the .repo file that the repo exists in does not contain any other repo configuration, the file itself will be deleted.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.del_repo myrepo
salt '*' pkg.del_repo myrepo basedir=/path/to/dir
Take a repository definition and expand it to the full pkg repository dict that can be used for comparison. This is a helper function to make certain repo managers sane for comparison in the pkgrepo states.
There is no use to calling this function via the CLI.
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
List the files that belong to a package, grouped by package. Not specifying any packages will return a list of _every_ file on the system's rpm database (not generally recommended).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd postfix
salt '*' pkg.file_list
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
List the files that belong to a package. Not specifying any packages will return a list of _every_ file on the system's rpm database (not generally recommended).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd postfix
salt '*' pkg.file_list
Display a repo from <basedir> (default basedir: /etc/yum.repos.d).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.get_repo myrepo
salt '*' pkg.get_repo myrepo basedir=/path/to/dir
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Lists packages belonging to a certain group, and which are installed
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_diff 'Perl Support'
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Lists packages belonging to a certain group
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_info 'Perl Support'
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Install the passed package group(s). This is basically a wrapper around pkg.install, which performs package group resolution for the user. This function is currently considered experimental, and should be expected to undergo changes.
Package group to install. To install more than one group, either use a comma-separated list or pass the value as a python list.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'Group 1'
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'Group 1,Group 2'
salt '*' pkg.group_install '["Group 1", "Group 2"]'
The name(s), in a list, of any packages that would normally be installed by the package group ("default" packages), which should not be installed. Can be passed either as a comma-separated list or a python list.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'My Group' skip='foo,bar'
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'My Group' skip='["foo", "bar"]'
The name(s), in a list, of any packages which are included in a group, which would not normally be installed ("optional" packages). Note that this will not enforce group membership; if you include packages which are not members of the specified groups, they will still be installed. Can be passed either as a comma-separated list or a python list.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'My Group' include='foo,bar'
salt '*' pkg.group_install 'My Group' include='["foo", "bar"]'
Note
Because this is essentially a wrapper around pkg.install, any argument which can be passed to pkg.install may also be included here, and it will be passed along wholesale.
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Lists all groups known by yum on this system
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_list
Install the passed package(s), add refresh=True to clean the yum database before package is installed.
The name of the package to be installed. Note that this parameter is ignored if either "pkgs" or "sources" is passed. Additionally, please note that this option can only be used to install packages from a software repository. To install a package file manually, use the "sources" option.
32-bit packages can be installed on 64-bit systems by appending the architecture designation (.i686, .i586, etc.) to the end of the package name.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.install <package name>
Repository Options:
Multiple Package Installation Options:
A list of packages to install from a software repository. Must be passed as a python list. A specific version number can be specified by using a single-element dict representing the package and its version.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo", {"bar": "1.2.3-4.el5"}]'
A list of RPM packages to install. Must be passed as a list of dicts, with the keys being package names, and the values being the source URI or local path to the package.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.install sources='[{"foo": "salt://foo.rpm"}, {"bar": "salt://bar.rpm"}]'
Returns a dict containing the new package names and versions:
{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
'new': '<new-version>'}}
Return the latest version of the named package available for upgrade or installation. If more than one package name is specified, a dict of name/version pairs is returned.
If the latest version of a given package is already installed, an empty string will be returned for that package.
A specific repo can be requested using the fromrepo keyword argument.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package name>
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package name> fromrepo=epel-testing
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package1> <package2> <package3> ...
List the packages currently installed in a dict:
{'<package_name>': '<version>'}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_pkgs
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Returns all available packages. Optionally, package names can be passed and the results will be filtered to packages matching those names. This can be helpful in discovering the version or repo to specify in a pkg.installed state. The return data is a dictionary of repo names, with each repo having a list of dictionaries denoting the package name and version. An example of the return data would look like this:
{
'<repo_name>': [
{'<package1>': '<version1>'},
{'<package2>': '<version2>'},
{'<package3>': '<version3>'}
]
}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs foo bar baz
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs 'samba4*' fromrepo=base,updates
Lists all repos in <basedir> (default: /etc/yum.repos.d/).
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_repos
Check whether or not an upgrade is available for all packages
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_upgrades
Modify one or more values for a repo. If the repo does not exist, it will be created, so long as the following values are specified:
Key/Value pairs may also be removed from a repo's configuration by setting a key to a blank value. Bear in mind that a name cannot be deleted, and a baseurl can only be deleted if a mirrorlist is specified (or vice versa).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.mod_repo reponame enabled=1 gpgcheck=1
salt '*' pkg.mod_repo reponame basedir=/path/to/dir enabled=1
salt '*' pkg.mod_repo reponame baseurl= mirrorlist=http://host.com/
Strips the architecture from the specified package name, if necessary. Circomstances where this would be done include:
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.normalize_name zsh.x86_64
Package purges are not supported by yum, this function is identical to pkg.remove.
Multiple Package Options:
New in version 0.16.0.
Returns a dict containing the changes.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.purge <package name>
salt '*' pkg.purge <package1>,<package2>,<package3>
salt '*' pkg.purge pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
Check the yum repos for updated packages
Returns:
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.refresh_db
Remove packages with yum -q -y remove.
Multiple Package Options:
New in version 0.16.0.
Returns a dict containing the changes.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.remove <package name>
salt '*' pkg.remove <package1>,<package2>,<package3>
salt '*' pkg.remove pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
Run a full system upgrade, a yum upgrade
Return a dict containing the new package names and versions:
{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
'new': '<new-version>'}}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.upgrade
Check whether or not an upgrade is available for a given package
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.upgrade_available <package name>
New in version 2014.1.0: (Hydrogen)
Runs an rpm -Va on a system, and returns the results in a dict
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.verify
Returns a string representing the package version or an empty string if not installed. If more than one package name is specified, a dict of name/version pairs is returned.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.version <package name>
salt '*' pkg.version <package1> <package2> <package3> ...
Current Salt release: 2014.1.6
Docs for previous releases on salt.rtfd.org.