Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date
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 No sane person manually updates all of their stuff all of the time. In the Fedora realm, I use dnf-automatic.
 http://dnf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/automatic.html
 The below instructions are for Fedora 26 and newer as the exact name of the timer changed from what it previously was.Update: 2018/12/04As of Fedora 28 (possibly 27), the original timer and service name was implemented.dnf install -y dnf-automaticNow you need to edit the /etc/dnf/automatic.conffile to do what you want.
 Generally I change the following fields from their default values to this.apply_updates = yes emit_via = email email_from = systemname@domain.com email_to = you@email.com email_host = your.smtp.serverOptionally, edit the timer frequency. I leave it at the default of 1 day. nano /usr/lib/systemd/system/dnf-automatic.timerSart and Enable the timer. systemctl enable --now dnf-automatic.timerYou can list the time to see the status systemctl list-timers --allIt will look like this NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES Tue 2017-11-21 22:42:15 CST 52min left Tue 2017-11-21 21:42:15 CST 7min ago dnf-makecache.timer dnf-makecache.servi Wed 2017-11-22 20:47:10 CST 22h left Tue 2017-11-21 20:47:10 CST 1h 2min ago systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer systemd-tmpfiles-cl n/a n/a Tue 2017-11-21 21:47:57 CST 1min 59s ago dnf-automatic.timer dnf-automatic.service n/a n/a n/a n/a sysstat-collect.timer sysstat-collect.ser n/a n/a n/a n/a sysstat-summary.timer sysstat-summary.ser 5 timers listed.I typically reboot at this point and then check the timer again to make sure it is running as expected. systemctl list-timers NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES Tue 2017-11-21 22:00:00 CST 5min left n/a n/a sysstat-collect.timer sysstat-collect.service Tue 2017-11-21 22:04:18 CST 9min left n/a n/a dnf-makecache.timer dnf-makecache.service Tue 2017-11-21 22:09:18 CST 14min left n/a n/a systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer systemd-tmpfiles-clean.service Tue 2017-11-21 22:54:18 CST 59min left n/a n/a dnf-automatic.timer dnf-automatic.service Wed 2017-11-22 00:07:00 CST 2h 12min left n/a n/a sysstat-summary.timer sysstat-summary.service
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 Very helpful, thanks! 
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 If there are no updates to install, do you still get an e-mail reporting this? Or only if there are updates installed? 
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 Nice guide, does this also work on the downstream forks of Fedora? 
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 @dustinb3403 said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: Nice guide, does this also work on the downstream forks of Fedora? As long as they use the standard DNF packages, yes. 
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 @brrabill said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: If there are no updates to install, do you still get an e-mail reporting this? Or only if there are updates installed? So, everything was set up properly, apparently. Because I just ran it manually again and received an e-mail. Have to get used to Linux, where if it doesn't say anything, it worked! 
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 @brrabill said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: If there are no updates to install, do you still get an e-mail reporting this? Or only if there are updates installed? No, only when it does something. 
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 As others have said, but never hurts to repeat ... great writeup. 
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 Guide updated to reflect timer name change back to original. 
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 I'm surprised this isn't a default setting. 
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 After upgrading to Fedora 29, my system was not updating regularly. Looking at systemctl list-timers --allI could see the timer was there but not scheduled to run.I have no idea what broke, because after researching, I found that they reintroduced the original naming, but the specific timers should have still been functioning. Whatever. I removed the -installand started the original.systemctl stop dnf-automatic-install.timer systemctl disable dnf-automatic-install.timer systemctl enable --now dnf-automatic.timer
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 @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: I'm surprised this isn't a default setting. Or at least provide an option during installation. @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: After upgrading to Fedora 29, my system was not updating regularly. Looking at systemctl list-timers --allI could see the timer was there but not scheduled to run.I have no idea what broke, because after researhcing, I found that they reintroduced the original nameing, but the specific timers should have still been functioning. Whatever. I removed the -installand started the original.systemctl stop dnf-automatic-install.timer systemctl disable dnf-automatic-install.timer systemctl enable --now dnf-automatic.timerYep, I was also experience the same thing too. 
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 @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: I'm surprised this isn't a default setting. Default for who or what? If you install Fedora 29 + Cinnamon desktop, there is a GUI updater installed by default. 
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 @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: I'm surprised this isn't a default setting. Defualt for who or what? If you install Fedora 29 + Cinnamon desktop, there is a GUI updater installed by default. In this day and age - I more expect things to autoupdate themselves for consumers... of course Fedora... so it is really a consumer thing? Is there a difference between client and server? I think we've had that conversation before.. though I don't recall the exact output. Now I'm ready for your impending /FFS 
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 @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: Now I'm ready for your impending /FFS :face_with_stuck-out_tongue: @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: In this day and age - I more expect things to autoupdate themselves for consumers... of course Fedora... so it is really a consumer thing? I just said there was something installed by default on Desktop. Not this, but something. @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: Is there a difference between client and server? I think we've had that conversation before.. though I don't recall the exact output. There is no difference. It is all in the initial install choices you make. The desktop ISO has a different installer I believe. But that doesn't change the underpinning. 
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 @Dashrender now to address auto updates for server. That also comes down to how you install. I always, 100% of the time, start from the NetInstall ISO and choose the Minimal option during install. That means there isn't jack shit setup by default. I honestly have no idea what any of the other options install. 
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 @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender now to address auto updates for server. That also comes down to how you install. I always, 100% of the time, start from the NetInstall ISO and choose the Minimal option during install. That means there isn't jack shit setup by default. I honestly have no idea what any of the other options install. I wouldn't expect you to auto install updates on Server... and my expectation is only for workstations.. and since Linux OSes don't really truly have a difference, then I guess a default type setting on it is not likely... of course, as you said - it could be one of the options you mentioned.. 
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 @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender now to address auto updates for server. That also comes down to how you install. I always, 100% of the time, start from the NetInstall ISO and choose the Minimal option during install. That means there isn't jack shit setup by default. I honestly have no idea what any of the other options install. I wouldn't expect you to auto install updates on Server... and my expectation is only for workstations.. and since Linux OSes don't really truly have a difference, then I guess a default type setting on it is not likely... of course, as you said - it could be one of the options you mentioned.. FFS The Cinnamon desktop install DOES.. I said this many times... 
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 @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender now to address auto updates for server. That also comes down to how you install. I always, 100% of the time, start from the NetInstall ISO and choose the Minimal option during install. That means there isn't jack shit setup by default. I honestly have no idea what any of the other options install. I wouldn't expect you to auto install updates on Server... and my expectation is only for workstations.. and since Linux OSes don't really truly have a difference, then I guess a default type setting on it is not likely... of course, as you said - it could be one of the options you mentioned.. FFS The Cinnamon desktop install DOES.. I said this many times... I think you mentioned it gives you a GUI, nothing about it automatically setups up auto updates. 
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 @Dashrender said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @JaredBusch said in Using dnf-automatic to keep Fedora up to date: @Dashrender now to address auto updates for server. That also comes down to how you install. I always, 100% of the time, start from the NetInstall ISO and choose the Minimal option during install. That means there isn't jack shit setup by default. I honestly have no idea what any of the other options install. I wouldn't expect you to auto install updates on Server... What? Why not? I sure would. You'd need a pretty good reason to avoid updates at their most critical spot. 






