wiki/distribution/guides/software-management/DNF.md

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Using dnf in OpenMandriva Lx true 2022-03-02T03:40:26.848Z documentation, dnf, user-guide markdown 2020-03-06T18:48:34.373Z

Using dnf in OpenMandriva Lx

For full documentation and more commands see DNF Command Reference {.is-success}

Some basic commands

  • install a package: $ sudo dnf --refresh install <package_name>

  • remove a package: $ sudo dnf remove <package_name>

  • search repositories for a package: $ sudo dnf search <package_name> Note: 'dnf search' will work with partial names as well

  • cleanup any files and packages left in cache and to remove repository metadata: $ sudo dnf clean all ; dnf clean all

  • update your Rock system: $ sudo dnf --refresh upgrade

  • update your Rolling system: $ sudo dnf --refresh distro-sync

Some other common dnf commands

autoremove removes packages installed as dependencies that are no longer required by currently installed programs.

Be careful and pay attention when using dnf autoremove. It is absolutely possible that this may remove something you don't want to remove. It is a good idea to keep a list of packages that were autoremoved so you know what to re-install if this happens. Note: You can find autoremoved packages in /var/log/dnf.log {.is-warning}

check-update checks for updates, but does not download or install the packages

downgrade reverts to the previous version of a package

info provides basic information about the package including name, version, release, and description

reinstall reinstalls the currently installed package

repolist list enabled repositories

Some commands may be abbreviated

dnf in=dnf install dnf ri=dnf reinstall dnf dg=dnf downgrade dnf rm=dnf remove dnf up=dnf upgrade dnf dsync=dnf distro-sync

Some common dnf options

--allowerasing Allow erasing of installed packages to resolve dependencies. This option could be used as an alternative to the yum swap command where packages to remove are not explicitly defined. Use carefully, know what you are doing or you can break your system.

-b, --best Try the best available package versions in transactions. Specifically during dnf upgrade, which by default skips over updates that can not be installed for dependency reasons, the switch forces DNF to only consider the latest packages. When running into packages with broken dependencies, DNF will fail giving a reason why the latest version can not be installed

--disable, --set-disabled Disable specified repositories (automatically saves). The option has to be used together with the config-manager command (dnf-plugins-core)

--disablerepo=<repoid> Disable specific repositories by an id or a glob. This option is mutually exclusive with --repo.

--downloadonly Download the resolved package set without performing any rpm transaction (install/upgrade/erase).

--enable, --set-enabled Enable specified repositories (automatically saves). The option has to be used together with the config-manager command (dnf-plugins-core)

--enablerepo=<repoid> Enable additional repositories by an id or a glob

--exclude=<package_name> Exclude certain packages from transaction

--nobest Set best option to False, so that transactions are not limited to best candidates only

-y, --assumeyes Automatically answer yes for all questions

More

$ dnf --help and $ man dnf

The help menu takes about a minute to a minute and a half to read. The man page takes about 3-5 minutes. Both are meant to be available for users to refer to as they use their system and need to find quickly how to do something.

There are also wiki pages and docs about dnf: Using the DNF software package manager, Fedora wiki page, and DNF Command Reference.