xenial (1) repoquery.1.gz

Provided by: yum-utils_1.1.31-3_all bug

NAME

       repoquery - query information from Yum repositories

SYNOPSIS

       repoquery [options] <item ...>
       repoquery -a [options]

DESCRIPTION

       repoquery is a program for querying information from YUM repositories similarly to rpm queries.

GENERAL OPTIONS

       --querytags
              List valid queryformat tags and exit..

       -v, --version
              Report program version and exit.

       --repoid=<repo>
              Specify  which  repository  to  query.  Using this option disables all repositories not explicitly
              enabled with --repoid option (can be used multiple times).  By  default  repoquery  uses  whatever
              repositories are enabled in YUM configuration.

       --enablerepo=<repo>
              In  addition  to the default set, query the given additional repository, even if it is disabled in
              YUM configuration.  Can be used multiple times.

       --disablerepo=<repo>
              Do not query the given repository, even if it is  enabled  in  YUM  configuration.   Can  be  used
              multiple times.

       --repofrompath=<repoid>,<path/url>
              Specify  a  path or url to a repository (same path as in a baseurl) to add to the repositories for
              this query. This option can be used multiple times. If you want to view only the  pkgs  from  this
              repository combine this with --repoid. The repoid for the repository is specified by <repoid>.

       --plugins
              Enable YUM plugin support.

       -q, --query
              For rpmquery compatibility, doesn't do anything.

       -h, --help
              Help; display a help message and then quit.

       --quiet
              Run quietly: no warnings printed to stderr.

       --verbose
              Produce verbose output.

       -C, --cache
              Tells  repoquery  to  run  entirely  from YUM cache - does not download any metadata or update the
              cache. Queries in this mode can fail or give partial/incorrect results if the  cache  isn't  fully
              populated beforehand with eg "yum makecache".

       --tempcache
              Create  and use a private cache instead of the main YUM cache. This is used by default when run as
              non-root user.

       -c <config file>, --config=<config file>
              Use alternative config file (default is /etc/yum.conf).

       --releasever=version
              Pretend the current release version is the given string. This is very useful  when  combined  with
              --installroot. You can also use --releasever=/ to take the releasever information from outside the
              installroot.  Note that with the default upstream cachedir, of /var/cache/yum, using  this  option
              will corrupt your cache (and you can use $releasever in your cachedir configuration to stop this).

       --setopt=option=value
              Set  any  config  option  in  yum config or repo files. For options in the global config just use:
              --setopt=option=value for repo options use: --setopt=repoid.option=value

PACKAGE QUERY OPTIONS

       -i, --info
              Show general information about package similarly to "rpm -qi"

       -l, --list
              List files in package.

       -R, --requires
              List package dependencies.

       --resolve
              When used with --requires, resolve capabilities to originating packages.

       --provides
              List capabilities package provides.

       --obsoletes
              List capabilities obsoleted by package.

       --conflicts
              List capabilities conflicting with package.

       --changelog
              List package changelog.

       --location
              Show a location where the  package  could  be  downloaded  from.   For  example:  wget  `repoquery
              --location yum`

       -s, --source
              Show package source RPM name.

       --srpm Operate on corresponding source RPM.

       --groupmember PACKAGE
              List the repodata groups (yumgroups.xml) belongs to (if any).

       --nvr  Use name-version-release output format (rpm query default)

       --nevra
              Use name-epoch:version-release.architecture output format (default)

       --envra
              Use epoch:name-version-release.architecture output format (easier to parse than nevra)

       --qf=FORMAT, --queryformat=FORMAT
              Specify  custom  output  format for queries. You can add ":date", ":day" and ":isodate" to all the
              tags that are a time, and you can add ":k", ":m", ":g", ":t" and  ":h"  to  sizes.  You  can  also
              specify field width as in sprintf (Eg. %-20{name})

       --output [text|ascii-tree|dot-tree]
              Output  format  which can be used with --requires/--whatrequires/--obsoletes/--conflicts.  Default
              output is 'text'.

       --level [all|any int]
              In combination with --output ascii-tree|dot-tree this option specifies  the  number  of  level  to
              print on the tree. Default level is 'all'.

PACKAGE SELECTION OPTIONS

       -a, --all
              Query all available packages (for rpmquery compatibility / shorthand for repoquery '*')

       -f, --file FILE
              Query package owning FILE.

       --whatobsoletes CAPABILITY
              Query all packages that obsolete CAPABILITY.

       --whatconflicts CAPABILITY
              Query all packages that conflict with CAPABILITY.

       --whatprovides CAPABILITY
              Query all packages that provide CAPABILITY.

       --whatrequires CAPABILITY
              Query all packages that require CAPABILITY.

       --alldeps
              When  used  with  --whatrequires,  look for non-explicit dependencies in addition to explicit ones
              (e.g. files and Provides in addition to package names).  This is the default.

       --exactdeps
              When used with --whatrequires, search for dependencies only exactly as given.  This is effectively
              the opposite of --alldeps.

       --recursive
              When used with --whatrequires, query packages recursively.

       --archlist=ARCH1[,ARCH2...]
              Limit  the query to packages of given architecture(s). Valid values are all architectures known to
              rpm/yum such as 'i386' and 'src' for source RPMS. Note that repoquery will now change yum's "arch"
              to  the first value in the archlist. So "--archlist=i386,i686" will change yum's canonical arch to
              i386, but allow packages of i386 and i686.

       --pkgnarrow=WHAT
              Limit what packages are considered for the query. Valid values for WHAT are: installed, available,
              recent, updates, extras, all and repository (default).

       --installed
              Restrict query ONLY to installed pkgs - disables all repos and only acts on rpmdb.

GROUP QUERY OPTIONS

       -i, --info
              Show general information about group.

       -l, --list
              List packages belonging to (required by) group.

       --grouppkgs=WHAT
              Specify  what  type of packages are queried from groups. Valid values for WHAT are all, mandatory,
              default, optional.

       --requires
              List groups required by group.

GROUP SELECTION OPTIONS

       -a     Query all available groups.

       -g, --group
              Query groups instead of packages.

EXAMPLES

       List all packages whose name contains 'perl':
              repoquery '*perl*'

       List all packages depending on openssl:
              repoquery --whatrequires openssl

       List all package names and the repository they come from, nicely formatted:
              repoquery -a --qf "%-20{repoid} %{name}"

       List name and summary of all available updates (if any), nicely formatted:
              repoquery -a --pkgnarrow=updates --qf "%{name}:\n%{summary}\n"

       List optional packages in base group:
              repoquery -g --grouppkgs=optional -l base

       List build requirements from 'anaconda' source rpm:
              repoquery --requires anaconda.src

       List packages which BuildRequire gail-devel
              repoquery --archlist=src --whatrequires gail-devel
                NB: This command will only work if you have repositories enabled which include srpms.

MISC

       Specifying package names
              A package can be referred to in all queries with any of the following:

              name
              name.arch
              name-ver
              name-ver-rel
              name-ver-rel.arch
              name-epoch:ver-rel.arch
              epoch:name-ver-rel.arch

              For example: repoquery -l kernel-2.4.1-10.i686
              Additionally wildcards (shell-style globs) can be used.

FILES

       As repoquery uses YUM libraries for retrieving all the information, it relies on  YUM  configuration  for
       its default values like which repositories to use. Consult YUM documentation for details:

       /etc/yum.conf
       /etc/yum/repos.d/
       /var/cache/yum/

SEE ALSO

       yum.conf (5)
       http://yum.baseurl.org/

AUTHORS

       See the Authors file included with this program.

BUGS

       There  are  of  course  no  bugs,  but  should  you find any, you should first consult the FAQ section on
       http://yum.baseurl.org/wiki/Faq and if unsuccessful in finding a resolution  contact  the  mailing  list:
       yum-devel@lists.baseurl.org.  To file a bug use http://bugzilla.redhat.com for Fedora/RHEL/Centos related
       bugs and http://yum.baseurl.org/report for all other bugs.