.\" This file is part of slackupgrade .\" Copyright (C) 2019 Sergey Poznyakoff. .\" .\" Slackware-upgrade-system is free software; you can redistribute it and/or .\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published .\" by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) .\" any later version. .\" .\" Slackware-upgrade-system is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, .\" but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of .\" MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the .\" GNU General Public License for more details. .\" .\" You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License .\" along with slackupgrade. If not, see .\" . .TH SLACKUPGRADE 8 "September 23, 2019" "SLACKUPGRADE" "System Manager's Manual" .SH NAME slackwupgrade \- do a full upgrade of a Slackware installation .SH SYNOPSIS .nh .na \fBslackupgrade\fR\ [\fB\-anqvy\fR]\ [\fB\-k \fIFILE\fR]\ [\fB\-p \fIPACKAGE\fR\]\ [\fB\-s \fISERIES\fR]\ [\fIURL\fR] .ad .hy .SH DESCRIPTION Upgrades the Slackware installation to a new release. The \fIURL\fR argument supplies the URL of the Slackware distribution or the directory on the local filesystem where it can be found. If not given, the program will use the nearest next version distribution from .nh .BR https://mirrors.slackware.com . .hy .PP When started, the program first verifies that it runs with root privileges on a Slackware installation and determines the current release version number. Then it verifies the distribution \fIURL\fR: it must contain the files \fBCHECKSUMS.md5\fR, \fBANNOUNCE.\fIVERSION\fR and the Slackware package series directories. .PP The file \fBCHECKSUMS.md5\fR and its GPG signature are downloaded first. Then, the program verifies that the signature is correct. For this to succeed, you must have the Slackware Linux Project public key in your keyring. If you don't, run .PP .EX curl -o - https://www.slackware.com/gpg-key | gpg --import .EE .PP When this initial check is passed, the program constructs two lists of packages: a list of currently installed packages and a list of packages available in the distribution. When constructing the list of available packages, known differences between Slackware releases are taken into account. For example, consider upgrade from version 14.1 to 14.2. It is known that the \fIportmap\fR package from 14.1 is replaced with the \fIrpcbind\fR in version 14.2. Consequently, if the program sees that \fIportmap\fR is installed on the system, it will include \fIrpcbind\fR to the list of installation candidates. Information about package differences in various versions is kept in \fIreplacement map files\fR. See the section \fBREPLACEMENT MAP\fR, for a discussion of these files. .PP The difference between these two lists, is the set of installed packages that have no equivalent in the available package list. Those are \fIorphaned packages\fR, which were either removed from the Slackware distribution, or were installed from third-party sources. It is unpredictable whether or not these will work on the newly upgraded system, therefore they will be removed after a successful upgrade. Before proceeding, the program will display this list on the screen and save it in file .nh \fB/var/log/slackupgrade-\fIOLD\fR-\fINEW\fB.removed\fR .hy for your consideration (here, \fIOLD\fR and \fINEW\fR stand for the current and new Slackware version numbers, correspondingly). After the upgrade, you can re-install them, if necessary. .PP After this step, the program will print the current Slackware version and the version you are going to upgrade to, and will ask you to confirm that you really want to upgrade. This is the right moment to quit if you decide to modify program invocation in order to handle orphaned packages. .PP If you do, type \fBno\fR. You have two options. First, if there are any orphaned packages that you want to keep in place, create a \fIkeep-list\fR file. This file should contain names of those packages, each name on a separate line. When you restart the program use the \fB\-k \fIFILE\fR\fR option to instruct it to use this file. .PP Secondly, if you are upgrading to the version for which there is no replacement map, there can be replacement packages for some of the orphaned ones. You can create a replacement map and save it to the \fB/etc/slackupgrade\fR directory (see the section \fBREPLACEMENT MAP\fR for details). If you do, please drop me a note so that your changes become available for other users (see the \fBBUGS\fR section, for contact information). You can also use the \fB\-p\fR command line option to provide the names of replacement packages from the command line. .PP By default, the program will upgrade only the packages actually installed on your system. You can request to install additional series from the distribution with the \fB\-s\fR option. E.g., it is often a good idea to install all packages from series \fBl\fR, like that: .PP .EX slackupgrade \-s l .EE .PP Otherwise, you can request to install all missing packages from all series, excepting \fBkde*\fR, by running the command with the \fB\-a\fR option. .PP At the end of the run, the program prints additional instructions and leaves the detailed log in file .nh \fB/var/log/slackupgrade-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.log\fR. .hy .sp Here, \fIOLD\fR and \fINEW\fR stand for the old and new Slackware release versions, correspondingly. .PP If any configuration files were created during the upgrade that conflict with the existing files, they will be stored alongside the original files, with the \fB.new\fR extension. The list of these files will be stored in file \fB/var/log/slackupgrade\-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.new\fR. .SH OPTIONS .TP .B \-a Install all series except \fBkde*\fR. .TP .B \-h Display a short help summary and exit. .TP \fB\-k \fIFILE\fR After successful upgrade, \fBslackupgrade\fR will remove previously installed packages that are not available in the new distribution. This option allows you to supply a list of packages that should not be removed. Each line in \fIFILE\fR should list exactly one package name, without version and architecture information. Empty lines and comments (\fB#\fR) are ignored. .sp To obtain initial list of packages that will be removed, run the program with the \fB\-n\fR option. At the end of the run, the list will be stored in file .nh \fB/var/log/slackupgrade-\fIOLD\fR-\fINEW\fB.dry_run.removed\fR. .hy At a pinch (not really recommended), you can move it elsewhere and use as argument to that option. This way all packages will be preserved. .TP .B \-n Dry-run mode: do nothing, print what would have been done. In spite of the name, the list of packages for removal will still be created. .sp In this mode, log files are created with the additional \fB\.dry_run\fR suffix (see the section \fBFILES\fR). .TP \fB\-p \fIPACKAGE\fR Install additional package. .TP .B \-q Quiet mode: suppress all messages, except error diagnostics. .TP \fB\-s \fISERIES\fR Additionally install all packages from \fISERIES\fR. .sp You can use this option together with \fB\-a\fR to install entire Slackware system, like that: .sp .nh .na slackupgrade -a -s kde -s kdei .ad .hy .TP .B \-v Verbosely list each package being upgraded or removed. .TP .B \-y Assume "yes" to all queries. .SH REPLACEMENT MAP Replacement map files contain names of packages that have been replaced with another packages in the new release. They are stored in the \fB/etc/slackupgrade\fR directory. Each replacement map is named \fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.repl\fR, where \fIOLD\fR and \fINEW\fR are two subsequent versions of Slackware. For example, the file \fB/etc/slackupgrade/14.1\-14.2.repl\fR contains changes in package names between versions 14.1 and 14.2. .PP This version of \fBslackupgrade\fR is shipped with two replacement maps, for upgrades between 14.0 and 14.1, and between 14.1 and 14.2. .PP A replacement map is a plaintext file with each package being described on a separate line. Lines consist of two or more columns separated with any amount of whitespace. Column one contains the name of the package in the version \fIOLD\fR of Slackware. Column two contains the name of the corresponding package in Slackware version \fINEW\fR. If the package was spli into several packages, additional packages can be listed on the same line. .PP Excessively long lines can be split over several physical lines by using the traditional UNIX approach: prefix and each line that must be joined with the next one with a backslash immediately followed by a newline character. .PP Comments are introduced with the hash sign (\fB#\fR) and extend to the nearest newline character. Empty lines and comments are ignored. .SH FILES .TP \fB/etc/slackupgrade/\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.repl\fR Replacement map for upgrades from version \fIOLD\fR to \fINEW\fR. .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade\-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.log\fR Detailed log of operations performed during the upgrade from version \fIOLD\fR to \fINEW\fR. .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade\-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.new\fR List of the new incoming config files on your system with the \fB.new\fR extension. You may need to merge them with your actual files, or move them over, or simply remove them. In any case, it is good idea to carefully consider each of them. .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade-\fIOLD\fR-\fINEW\fB.removed\fR The list of packages that were removed from the system. Examine it. You may need to re-install some or all of them from third-party servers or from slackbuilds. .PP When running in dry run mode (see the \fB\-n\fR option), names of the three log files above contain an additional \fB.dry_run\fR suffix: .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade\-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.dry_run.log\fR .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade\-\fIOLD\fB\-\fINEW\fB.dry_run.new\fR .TP \fB/var/log/slackupgrade-\fIOLD\fR-\fINEW\fB.dry_run.removed\fR .SS Backups At the start of each run, existing log files are backed up. The name of each backup is created by adding a tilde to the end of the log file name. E.g. \fBslackupgrade-14.1-14.2.log\fR is renamed to \fBslackupgrade-14.1-14.2.log~\fR. Existing backup copies are renamed using the following pattern: \fBX~\fR becomes \fBX~1\fR, \fBX~1\fR becomes \fBX~2\fR and so on. At most five backup copies are kept (from \fBX~\fR up to \fBX~4\fR). .SH "SEE ALSO" The \fBUPGRADE.TXT\fR document, outlining the procedure as a whole: .nh <\fBhttps://mirrors.nix.org.ua/linux/slackware/slackware\-14.1/UPGRADE.TXT\fR>. .hy .PP .BR upgradepkg (8). .SH BUGS Only main Slackware packages are considered. The \fBpatches\fR subdirectory is not used. .PP Report bugs to . .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright \(co 2019 Sergey Poznyakoff .br .na License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later .br .ad This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. .\" Local variables: .\" eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp) .\" time-stamp-start: ".TH [A-Z_][A-Z0-9_.\\-]* [0-9] \"" .\" time-stamp-format: "%:B %:d, %:y" .\" time-stamp-end: "\"" .\" time-stamp-line-limit: 20 .\" end: