upgrade-system 1.9.0.0 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
upgrade-system (1.9.0.0) unstable; urgency=medium * [cron.daily] - Deleted. APT ships native systemd timers. + [mainscript] to handle deletion. * [copyright],[upgrade-system.conf.5],[upgrade-system.8],[cron.daily]: = Bumped my Copyright to 2022. * [upgrade-system],[upgrade-system.conf],[upgrade-system.conf.5]: - Removed --show-upgraded. It's the default since apt (>= 1.3.0). * [control]: = Bumped Depends apt to (>= 1.3.0) for --autoremove. + Suggests: unattended-upgrades * [upgrade-system]: + Added optional "unattended-upgrade --no-minimal-upgrade-steps --verbose" at the start of the upgrade loop. If the binary exists, this will be run before everything else. = Moved "dpkg --configure --pending" to the end of the upgrade loop. = Refactored large code fragments according to 'shellcheck' output. * [upgrade-system.conf]: = Commented out all variables. Uncomment to override built-in defaults. * [upgrade-system.conf.5]: = Mention that the examples are the built-in defaults. * [ FLAUSCH ]: + Added check for dummy|transitional packages. + Added check for ucf configurations. -- Martin-Éric Racine <email address hidden> Mon, 07 Feb 2022 15:52:46 +0200
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Martin-Éric Racine
- Uploaded to:
- Sid
- Original maintainer:
- Martin-Éric Racine
- Architectures:
- all
- Section:
- admin
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jammy | release | universe | admin |
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
upgrade-system_1.9.0.0.dsc | 1.4 KiB | 26ac210e636f0f0382210e73c0ebeff619739890bf3e7a5d5a1ea02fdcc684a2 |
upgrade-system_1.9.0.0.tar.xz | 13.2 KiB | da8c0d7197add8fdd10b334785fc05e8b177f122323d94b1b7f609825c3ac0bf |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.8.2.4 to 1.9.0.0 (6.3 KiB)
No changes file available.
Binary packages built by this source
- upgrade-system: command for upgrading and sanitizing a Debian system
Upgrade-system offers a convenient way to keep a Debian system up-to-date,
yet free from accumulated cruft such as obsolete libraries.
.
It is particularly useful on systems that mix packages from different
releases (stable/testing/ unstable) and on desktop systems where packages
are frequently installed or removed according to evolving user tastes.
.
By default, it is configured to purge all packages that are not listed
as another package's dependency. Less drastic settings are possible by
editing /etc/upgrade-system. conf(5) .