From 727efe6d8ba1fa9947d69a9a46c4afefaee22319 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Anton=20Luka=20=C5=A0ijanec?= Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2023 18:49:16 +0100 Subject: unattended upgrade --- etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades | 166 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 166 insertions(+) create mode 100644 etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades diff --git a/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades b/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f24af88 --- /dev/null +++ b/etc/apt/apt.conf.d/50unattended-upgrades @@ -0,0 +1,166 @@ +// Unattended-Upgrade::Origins-Pattern controls which packages are +// upgraded. +// +// Lines below have the format "keyword=value,...". A +// package will be upgraded only if the values in its metadata match +// all the supplied keywords in a line. (In other words, omitted +// keywords are wild cards.) The keywords originate from the Release +// file, but several aliases are accepted. The accepted keywords are: +// a,archive,suite (eg, "stable") +// c,component (eg, "main", "contrib", "non-free") +// l,label (eg, "Debian", "Debian-Security") +// o,origin (eg, "Debian", "Unofficial Multimedia Packages") +// n,codename (eg, "jessie", "jessie-updates") +// site (eg, "http.debian.net") +// The available values on the system are printed by the command +// "apt-cache policy", and can be debugged by running +// "unattended-upgrades -d" and looking at the log file. +// +// Within lines unattended-upgrades allows 2 macros whose values are +// derived from /etc/debian_version: +// ${distro_id} Installed origin. +// ${distro_codename} Installed codename (eg, "buster") +Unattended-Upgrade::Origins-Pattern { + // Codename based matching: + // This will follow the migration of a release through different + // archives (e.g. from testing to stable and later oldstable). + // Software will be the latest available for the named release, + // but the Debian release itself will not be automatically upgraded. +// "origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename}-updates"; +// "origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename}-proposed-updates"; + "origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename},label=Debian"; + "origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename},label=Debian-Security"; + "origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename}-security,label=Debian-Security"; + + // Archive or Suite based matching: + // Note that this will silently match a different release after + // migration to the specified archive (e.g. testing becomes the + // new stable). +// "o=Debian,a=stable"; +// "o=Debian,a=stable-updates"; +// "o=Debian,a=proposed-updates"; +// "o=Debian Backports,a=${distro_codename}-backports,l=Debian Backports"; + // upgrade everything + ""; +}; + +// Python regular expressions, matching packages to exclude from upgrading +Unattended-Upgrade::Package-Blacklist { + // The following matches all packages starting with linux- +// "linux-"; + + // Use $ to explicitely define the end of a package name. Without + // the $, "libc6" would match all of them. +// "libc6$"; +// "libc6-dev$"; +// "libc6-i686$"; + + // Special characters need escaping +// "libstdc\+\+6$"; + + // The following matches packages like xen-system-amd64, xen-utils-4.1, + // xenstore-utils and libxenstore3.0 +// "(lib)?xen(store)?"; + + // For more information about Python regular expressions, see + // https://docs.python.org/3/howto/regex.html +}; + +// This option allows you to control if on a unclean dpkg exit +// unattended-upgrades will automatically run +// dpkg --force-confold --configure -a +// The default is true, to ensure updates keep getting installed +//Unattended-Upgrade::AutoFixInterruptedDpkg "true"; + +// Split the upgrade into the smallest possible chunks so that +// they can be interrupted with SIGTERM. This makes the upgrade +// a bit slower but it has the benefit that shutdown while a upgrade +// is running is possible (with a small delay) +//Unattended-Upgrade::MinimalSteps "true"; + +// Install all updates when the machine is shutting down +// instead of doing it in the background while the machine is running. +// This will (obviously) make shutdown slower. +// Unattended-upgrades increases logind's InhibitDelayMaxSec to 30s. +// This allows more time for unattended-upgrades to shut down gracefully +// or even install a few packages in InstallOnShutdown mode, but is still a +// big step back from the 30 minutes allowed for InstallOnShutdown previously. +// Users enabling InstallOnShutdown mode are advised to increase +// InhibitDelayMaxSec even further, possibly to 30 minutes. +//Unattended-Upgrade::InstallOnShutdown "false"; + +// Send email to this address for problems or packages upgrades +// If empty or unset then no email is sent, make sure that you +// have a working mail setup on your system. A package that provides +// 'mailx' must be installed. E.g. "user@example.com" +Unattended-Upgrade::Mail "root@localhost"; + +// Set this value to one of: +// "always", "only-on-error" or "on-change" +// If this is not set, then any legacy MailOnlyOnError (boolean) value +// is used to chose between "only-on-error" and "on-change" +//Unattended-Upgrade::MailReport "on-change"; + +// Remove unused automatically installed kernel-related packages +// (kernel images, kernel headers and kernel version locked tools). +//Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-Unused-Kernel-Packages "true"; + +// Do automatic removal of newly unused dependencies after the upgrade +//Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-New-Unused-Dependencies "true"; + +// Do automatic removal of unused packages after the upgrade +// (equivalent to apt-get autoremove) +//Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-Unused-Dependencies "false"; + +// Automatically reboot *WITHOUT CONFIRMATION* if +// the file /var/run/reboot-required is found after the upgrade +//Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "false"; + +// Automatically reboot even if there are users currently logged in +// when Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot is set to true +//Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot-WithUsers "true"; + +// If automatic reboot is enabled and needed, reboot at the specific +// time instead of immediately +// Default: "now" +//Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot-Time "02:00"; + +// Use apt bandwidth limit feature, this example limits the download +// speed to 70kb/sec +//Acquire::http::Dl-Limit "70"; + +// Enable logging to syslog. Default is False +// Unattended-Upgrade::SyslogEnable "false"; + +// Specify syslog facility. Default is daemon +// Unattended-Upgrade::SyslogFacility "daemon"; + +// Download and install upgrades only on AC power +// (i.e. skip or gracefully stop updates on battery) +// Unattended-Upgrade::OnlyOnACPower "true"; + +// Download and install upgrades only on non-metered connection +// (i.e. skip or gracefully stop updates on a metered connection) +// Unattended-Upgrade::Skip-Updates-On-Metered-Connections "true"; + +// Verbose logging +// Unattended-Upgrade::Verbose "false"; + +// Print debugging information both in unattended-upgrades and +// in unattended-upgrade-shutdown +// Unattended-Upgrade::Debug "false"; + +// Allow package downgrade if Pin-Priority exceeds 1000 +// Unattended-Upgrade::Allow-downgrade "false"; + +// When APT fails to mark a package to be upgraded or installed try adjusting +// candidates of related packages to help APT's resolver in finding a solution +// where the package can be upgraded or installed. +// This is a workaround until APT's resolver is fixed to always find a +// solution if it exists. (See Debian bug #711128.) +// The fallback is enabled by default, except on Debian's sid release because +// uninstallable packages are frequent there. +// Disabling the fallback speeds up unattended-upgrades when there are +// uninstallable packages at the expense of rarely keeping back packages which +// could be upgraded or installed. +// Unattended-Upgrade::Allow-APT-Mark-Fallback "true"; -- cgit v1.2.3