salt.modules.ebuild

Support for Portage

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.

optdepends:
  • portage Python adapter

For now all package names MUST include the package category, i.e. 'vim' will not work, 'app-editors/vim' will.

salt.modules.ebuild.check_db(*names, **kwargs)

New in version 0.17.0.

Returns a dict containing the following information for each specified package:

  1. A key found, which will be a boolean value denoting if a match was found in the package database.
  2. If found is False, then a second key called suggestions will be present, which will contain a list of possible matches. This list will be empty if the package name was specified in category/pkgname format, since the suggestions are only intended to disambiguate ambiguous package names (ones submitted without a category).

CLI Examples:

salt '*' pkg.check_db <package1> <package2> <package3>
salt.modules.ebuild.check_extra_requirements(pkgname, pkgver)

Check if the installed package already has the given requirements.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.check_extra_requirements 'sys-devel/gcc' '~>4.1.2:4.1::gentoo[nls,fortran]'
salt.modules.ebuild.depclean(name=None, slot=None, fromrepo=None, pkgs=None)

Portage has a function to remove unused dependencies. If a package is provided, it will only removed the package if no other package depends on it.

name
The name of the package to be cleaned.
slot
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.
fromrepo
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.
pkgs
Clean multiple packages. slot and fromrepo arguments are ignored if this argument is present. Must be passed as a python list.

Return a list containing the removed packages:

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.depclean <package name>
salt.modules.ebuild.ex_mod_init(low)

If the config option ebuild.enforce_nice_config is set to True, this module will enforce a nice tree structure for /etc/portage/package.* configuration files.

New in version 0.17.0: Initial automatic enforcement added when pkg is used on a Gentoo system.

Changed in version 2014.1.0-Hydrogen: Configure option added to make this behaviour optional, defaulting to off.

See also

ebuild.ex_mod_init is called automatically when a state invokes a pkg state on a Gentoo system. salt.states.pkg.mod_init()

ebuild.ex_mod_init uses portage_config.enforce_nice_config to do the lifting. salt.modules.portage_config.enforce_nice_config()

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.ex_mod_init
salt.modules.ebuild.install(name=None, refresh=False, pkgs=None, sources=None, slot=None, fromrepo=None, uses=None, binhost=None, **kwargs)

Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,Carbon: 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 emerge 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 the passed package(s), add refresh=True to sync the portage tree before package is installed.

name

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 emerge a package from the portage tree. To install a tbz2 package manually, use the "sources" option described below.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.install <package name>
refresh
Whether or not to sync the portage tree before installing.
version
Install a specific version of the package, e.g. 1.0.9-r1. Ignored if "pkgs" or "sources" is passed.
slot

Similar to version, but specifies a valid slot to be installed. It will install the latest available version in the specified slot. Ignored if "pkgs" or "sources" or "version" is passed.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.install sys-devel/gcc slot='4.4'
fromrepo

Similar to slot, but specifies the repository from the package will be installed. It will install the latest available version in the specified repository. Ignored if "pkgs" or "sources" or "version" is passed.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.install salt fromrepo='gentoo'
uses

Similar to slot, but specifies a list of use flag. Ignored if "pkgs" or "sources" or "version" is passed.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.install sys-devel/gcc uses='["nptl","-nossp"]'

Multiple Package Installation Options:

pkgs

A list of packages to install from the portage tree. Must be passed as a python list.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.install pkgs='["foo","bar","~category/package:slot::repository[use]"]'
sources

A list of tbz2 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.tbz2"},{"bar": "salt://bar.tbz2"}]'
binhost
has two options try and force. try - tells emerge to try and install the package from a configured binhost. force - forces emerge to install the package from a binhost otherwise it fails out.

Returns a dict containing the new package names and versions:

{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
               'new': '<new-version>'}}
salt.modules.ebuild.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.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package name>
salt '*' pkg.latest_version <package1> <package2> <package3> ...
salt.modules.ebuild.list_pkgs(versions_as_list=False, **kwargs)

List the packages currently installed in a dict:

{'<package_name>': '<version>'}

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.list_pkgs
salt.modules.ebuild.list_upgrades(refresh=True, backtrack=3, **kwargs)

List all available package upgrades.

refresh
Whether or not to sync the portage tree before checking for upgrades.
backtrack
Specifies an integer number of times to backtrack if dependency calculation fails due to a conflict or an unsatisfied dependency (default: ´3´).

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.list_upgrades
salt.modules.ebuild.porttree_matches(name)

Returns a list containing the matches for a given package name from the portage tree. Note that the specific version of the package will not be provided for packages that have several versions in the portage tree, but rather the name of the package (i.e. "dev-python/paramiko").

salt.modules.ebuild.purge(name=None, slot=None, fromrepo=None, pkgs=None, **kwargs)

Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,Carbon: 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 emerge 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).

Portage does not have a purge, this function calls remove followed by depclean to emulate a purge process

name
The name of the package to be deleted.
slot
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.
fromrepo
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.

Multiple Package Options:

pkgs
Uninstall multiple packages. slot and fromrepo arguments are ignored if this argument is present. Must be passed as a python list.

New in version 0.16.0.

Returns a dict containing the changes.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.purge <package name>
salt '*' pkg.purge <package name> slot=4.4
salt '*' pkg.purge <package1>,<package2>,<package3>
salt '*' pkg.purge pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
salt.modules.ebuild.refresh_db()

Updates the portage tree (emerge --sync). Uses eix-sync if available.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.refresh_db
salt.modules.ebuild.remove(name=None, slot=None, fromrepo=None, pkgs=None, **kwargs)

Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,Carbon: 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 emerge 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 via emerge --unmerge.

name
The name of the package to be deleted.
slot
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.
fromrepo
Restrict the remove to a specific slot. Ignored if name is None.

Multiple Package Options:

pkgs
Uninstall multiple packages. slot and fromrepo arguments are ignored if this argument is present. Must be passed as a python list.

New in version 0.16.0.

Returns a dict containing the changes.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.remove <package name>
salt '*' pkg.remove <package name> slot=4.4 fromrepo=gentoo
salt '*' pkg.remove <package1>,<package2>,<package3>
salt '*' pkg.remove pkgs='["foo", "bar"]'
salt.modules.ebuild.update(pkg, slot=None, fromrepo=None, refresh=False, binhost=None)

Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,Carbon: 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 emerge 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).

Updates the passed package (emerge --update package)

slot
Restrict the update to a particular slot. It will update to the latest version within the slot.
fromrepo
Restrict the update to a particular repository. It will update to the latest version within the repository.
binhost
has two options try and force. try - tells emerge to try and install the package from a configured binhost. force - forces emerge to install the package from a binhost otherwise it fails out.

Return a dict containing the new package names and versions:

{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
               'new': '<new-version>'}}

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.update <package name>
salt.modules.ebuild.upgrade(refresh=True, binhost=None, backtrack=3)

Changed in version 2015.8.12,2016.3.3,Carbon: 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 emerge 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 (emerge -uDN @world)

binhost
has two options try and force. try - tells emerge to try and install the package from a configured binhost. force - forces emerge to install the package from a binhost otherwise it fails out.
backtrack
Specifies an integer number of times to backtrack if dependency calculation fails due to a conflict or an unsatisfied dependency (default: ´3´).

Return a dict containing the new package names and versions:

{'<package>': {'old': '<old-version>',
               'new': '<new-version>'}}

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.upgrade
salt.modules.ebuild.upgrade_available(name)

Check whether or not an upgrade is available for a given package

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.upgrade_available <package name>
salt.modules.ebuild.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> ...
salt.modules.ebuild.version_clean(version)

Clean the version string removing extra data.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.version_clean <version_string>
salt.modules.ebuild.version_cmp(pkg1, pkg2, **kwargs)

Do a cmp-style comparison on two packages. Return -1 if pkg1 < pkg2, 0 if pkg1 == pkg2, and 1 if pkg1 > pkg2. Return None if there was a problem making the comparison.

CLI Example:

salt '*' pkg.version_cmp '0.2.4-0' '0.2.4.1-0'