A module to wrap pacman calls, since Arch is the best (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Arch_is_the_best)
Important
If you feel that Salt should be using this module to manage packages on a minion, and it is using a different module (or gives an error similar to 'pkg.install' is not available), see here.
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
file_dict
(*packages, **kwargs)¶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 package database (not generally recommended).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd postfix
salt '*' pkg.file_list
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
file_list
(*packages, **kwargs)¶List the files that belong to a package. Not specifying any packages will return a list of _every_ file on the system's package database (not generally recommended).
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd
salt '*' pkg.file_list httpd postfix
salt '*' pkg.file_list
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
group_diff
(name)¶New in version 2016.11.0.
Lists which of a group's packages are installed and which are not installed
Compatible with yumpkg.group_diff for easy support of state.pkg.group_installed
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_diff 'xorg'
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
group_info
(name)¶New in version 2016.11.0.
Lists all packages in the specified group
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_info 'xorg'
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
group_list
()¶New in version 2016.11.0.
Lists all groups known by pacman on this system
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.group_list
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
install
(name=None, refresh=False, sysupgrade=None, pkgs=None, sources=None, **kwargs)¶Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,2016.11.0: On minions running systemd>=205, systemd-run(1) is now used to
isolate commands which modify installed packages from the
salt-minion
daemon's control group. This is done to keep systemd
from killing any pacman commands spawned by Salt when the
salt-minion
service is restarted. (see KillMode
in the
systemd.kill(5) manpage for more information). If desired, usage of
systemd-run(1) can be suppressed by setting a config option
called systemd.scope
, with a value of
False
(no quotes).
Install (pacman -S
) the specified packag(s). Add refresh=True
to
install with -y
, add sysupgrade=True
to install with -u
.
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.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.install <package name>
Whether or not to refresh the package database before installing.
Whether or not to upgrade the system packages before installing.
If refresh is set to True
but sysupgrade is not specified, -u
will be
applied
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. As with the version
parameter above, comparison operators
can be used to target a specific version of a package.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo", {"bar": "1.2.3-4"}]'
salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo", {"bar": "<1.2.3-4"}]'
A list of 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.pkg.tar.xz"}, {"bar": "salt://bar.pkg.tar.xz"}]'
Returns a dict containing the new package names and versions:
{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
'new': '<new-version>'}}
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
latest_version
(*names, **kwargs)¶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.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package name>
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package1> <package2> <package3> ...
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
list_pkgs
(versions_as_list=False, **kwargs)¶List the packages currently installed as a dict:
{'<package_name>': '<version>'}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_pkgs
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
list_repo_pkgs
(*args, **kwargs)¶Returns all available packages. Optionally, package names (and name globs) can be passed and the results will be filtered to packages matching those names.
This function can be helpful in discovering the version or repo to specify
in a pkg.installed
state.
The return data will be a dictionary mapping package names to a list of
version numbers, ordered from newest to oldest. If byrepo
is set to
True
, then the return dictionary will contain repository names at the
top level, and each repository will map packages to lists of version
numbers. For example:
# With byrepo=False (default)
{
'bash': ['4.4.005-2'],
'nginx': ['1.10.2-2']
}
# With byrepo=True
{
'core': {
'bash': ['4.4.005-2']
},
'extra': {
'nginx': ['1.10.2-2']
}
}
Only include results from the specified repo(s). Multiple repos can be specified, comma-separated.
When True
, the return data for each package will be organized by
repository.
When True
, the package database will be refreshed (i.e. pacman
-Sy
) before checking for available versions.
CLI Examples:
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs foo bar baz
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs 'samba4*' fromrepo=base,updates
salt '*' pkg.list_repo_pkgs 'python2-*' byrepo=True
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
list_upgrades
(refresh=False, root=None, **kwargs)¶List all available package upgrades on this system
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.list_upgrades
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
owner
(*paths, **kwargs)¶New in version 2014.7.0.
Return the name of the package that owns the file. Multiple file paths can
be passed. Like pkg.version
, if a
single path is passed, a string will be returned, and if multiple paths are
passed, a dictionary of file/package name pairs will be returned.
If the file is not owned by a package, or is not present on the minion, then an empty string will be returned for that path.
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.owner /usr/bin/apachectl salt '*' pkg.owner /usr/bin/apachectl /usr/bin/zsh
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
purge
(name=None, pkgs=None, **kwargs)¶Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,2016.11.0: On minions running systemd>=205, systemd-run(1) is now used to
isolate commands which modify installed packages from the
salt-minion
daemon's control group. This is done to keep systemd
from killing any pacman commands spawned by Salt when the
salt-minion
service is restarted. (see KillMode
in the
systemd.kill(5) manpage for more information). If desired, usage of
systemd-run(1) can be suppressed by setting a config option
called systemd.scope
, with a value of
False
(no quotes).
Recursively remove a package and all dependencies which were installed
with it, this will call a pacman -Rsc
The name of the package to be deleted.
Multiple Package Options:
A list of packages to delete. Must be passed as a python list. The
name
parameter will be ignored if this option is passed.
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"]'
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
refresh_db
(root=None, **kwargs)¶Just run a pacman -Sy
, return a dict:
{'<database name>': Bool}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.refresh_db
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
remove
(name=None, pkgs=None, **kwargs)¶Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,2016.11.0: On minions running systemd>=205, systemd-run(1) is now used to
isolate commands which modify installed packages from the
salt-minion
daemon's control group. This is done to keep systemd
from killing any pacman commands spawned by Salt when the
salt-minion
service is restarted. (see KillMode
in the
systemd.kill(5) manpage for more information). If desired, usage of
systemd-run(1) can be suppressed by setting a config option
called systemd.scope
, with a value of
False
(no quotes).
Remove packages with pacman -R
.
The name of the package to be deleted.
Multiple Package Options:
A list of packages to delete. Must be passed as a python list. The
name
parameter will be ignored if this option is passed.
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"]'
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
upgrade
(refresh=False, root=None, **kwargs)¶Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,2016.11.0: On minions running systemd>=205, systemd-run(1) is now used to
isolate commands which modify installed packages from the
salt-minion
daemon's control group. This is done to keep systemd
from killing any pacman commands spawned by Salt when the
salt-minion
service is restarted. (see KillMode
in the
systemd.kill(5) manpage for more information). If desired, usage of
systemd-run(1) can be suppressed by setting a config option
called systemd.scope
, with a value of
False
(no quotes).
Run a full system upgrade, a pacman -Syu
Whether or not to refresh the package database before installing.
Returns a dictionary containing the changes:
{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
'new': '<new-version>'}}
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.upgrade
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
upgrade_available
(name, **kwargs)¶Check whether or not an upgrade is available for a given package
CLI Example:
salt '*' pkg.upgrade_available <package name>
salt.modules.pacmanpkg.
version
(*names, **kwargs)¶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> ...