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 ZYPPER(8)                                                                               ZYPPER                                                                              ZYPPER(8)

NAME
       zypper - Command-line interface to ZYpp system management library (libzypp)

SYNOPSIS
       zypper [--global-opts] command [--command-opts] [command-arguments]

       zypper subcommand [--command-opts] [command-arguments]

       zypper help command

DESCRIPTION
       zypper is a command-line interface to ZYpp system management library (libzypp). It can be used to install, update, remove software, manage repositories, perform various
       queries, and more.

CONCEPTS
       Most of the following concepts are common for all applications based on the libzypp package management library, but there are some zypper specifics.

   System Packages
       The set of installed packages on a system is sometimes denoted as repository @System or System Packages. In contrast to available repositories providing packages which can be
       installed, @System provides packages which can only be deleted. Installed packages which are not also provided by at least one of the available repositories are often denoted
       as being unwanted, orphaned or dropped.

   Repositories
       Libzypp works with repository metadata, this is information about packages and their relations extracted from RPM packages and other data like patch information, pattern
       definitions, etc. These data are stored together with the RPM files in folders called repositories. Repositories can be placed on various media like an HTTP or FTP server,
       DVD, or a folder on a local disc.

       There is a special set of commands in zypper intended to manipulate repositories. Also many commands and options take a repository as an argument. See section COMMANDS,
       subsection Repository Management for more details.

   GPG checks
       Disabling GPG checks is not recommended. Signing data enables the recipient to verify that no modifications occurred after the data were signed. Accepting data with no, wrong
       or unknown signature can lead to a corrupted system and in extreme cases even to a system compromise.

       Zypp verifies the authenticity of repository metadata by checking their GPG signature. If the repository metadata are signed with a trusted key and successfully verified,
       packages from this repository are accepted for installation if they match the checksum provided in the metadata. Using unsigned repositories needs to be confirmed.

       If the repository metadata are not signed, the GPG signature of each downloaded rpm package is checked before accepting it for installation. Packages from unsigned
       repositories need a valid GPG signature. Using unsigned packages needs to be confirmed.

       The above is the default behavior defined by settings in /etc/zypp/zypp.conf.

       The addrepo and modifyrepo commands provide further options to tune the behavior per repository. It is for example possible to relax the need to confirm installing unsigned
       packages for a specific repository. But if you do so, you should be very certain that an attacker can hardly modify the package data within the repository or on the way to
       your machine. See section COMMANDS for details about the command options.

   Resource Identifiers (URI)
       To specify locations of repositories or other resources (RPM files, .repo files) you can use any type of URI supported by libzypp. In addition Zypper accepts a special URI
       identifying openSUSE Build Service (OBS) repositories in the addrepo command. These URIs have the form of obs://’project'/[platform].

       See section COMMANDS, subsection Repository Management for a complete list and examples of supported URI formats.

   Refresh
       Refreshing a repository means downloading metadata of packages from the medium (if needed), storing it in local cache (typically under /var/cache/zypp/raw/’alias' directory)
       and preparsing the metadata into .solv files (building the solv cache), typically under /var/cache/zypp/solv/’alias'.

       The metadata get refreshed either automatically or on user request. An automatic refresh takes place right before reading metadata from the database if the auto-refresh is
       enabled for the repository and the metadata is reported to be out of date. If the auto-refresh is disabled, the repository will only be refreshed on user request. You can
       request a refresh by calling zypper refresh (see the documentation of the refresh command for details).

       The repository metadata are checked for changes before actually doing the refresh. A change is detected by downloading one or two metadata index files (small files) and
       comparing the checksums of the cached ones and the remote ones. If the files differ, the repository is out of date and will be refreshed.

       To delay the up-to-date check (and thus the automatic refresh) for a certain number of minutes, edit the value of the repo.refresh.delay attribute of ZYpp config file
       (/etc/zypp/zypp.conf). This means, zypper will not even try to download and check the index files, and you will be able to use zypper for operations like search or info
       without internet access or root privileges.

   Services
       Services are one level above repositories and serve to manage repositories or to do some special tasks. Libzypp currently supports Repository Index Service (RIS) and Plugin
       Service.

       Repository Index Service (RIS) is a special type of repository which contains a list of other repositories. This list can be generated dynamically by the server according to
       some URI parameters or user name, or can be static. Once such service is added to your system, zypper takes care of adding, modifying, or removing these repositories on your
       system to reflect the current list. See section Service Management and <https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Standards_Repository_Index_Service> for more details.

   Package Types
       Zypper works with several types of resource objects, called resolvables. A resolvable might be a  package,  patch,  pattern,  product;  basically  any  kind  of  object  with
       dependencies to other objects.

       package
           An ordinary RPM package.

       patch
           A  released  patch  conflicts  with  the affected/vulnerable versions of a collection of packages. As long as any of these affected/vulnerable versions are installed, the
           conflict triggers and the patch is classified as needed, optional or as unwanted if the patch is locked. + Selecting the patch, the conflict is resolved by  updating  all
           installed  and  affected/vulnerable  packages  to  a  version  providing the fix. When updating the packages zypper always aims for the latest available version. Resolved
           patches are classified as either applied or not needed, depending on whether they refer to actually installed packages. + Depending on the kind  of  defect,  patches  are
           classified  by  category and severity. Commonly used values for category are security, recommended, optional, feature, document or yast. Commonly used values for severity
           are critical, important, moderate, low or unspecified. + Note that the patch command does not apply optional patches (category optional or feature)  by  default.  If  you
           actually  want to consider all optional patches as being needed, say patch --with-optional. Specific patches can be applied using the install command (e.g. zypper install
           patch:openSUSE-2014-7).

       pattern
           A group of packages required or recommended to install some functionality.

       product
           A group of packages which are necessary to install a product.

       srcpackage
           Source code package (.src.rpm). This type works in search and install commands.

       application
           Legacy: Since libzypp-17.7.0 this type is no longer available.

       Throughout this manual we will often refer to resolvables simply as packages and to resolvable types as package type or kind. These type names can be  used  as  arguments  of
       --type option in several commands like install, info, or search. Commands should also allow to specify resolvables as KIND:’NAME' (e.g. patch:openSUSE-2014-7).

   Package Dependencies
       Software  packages  depend  on  each other in various ways. Packages usually require or recommend other packages, but they can also conflict with other packages. Packages may
       support specific hardware or language settings. Zypper uses a dependency solver to find out which packages need to be installed to satisfy the user’s request. See <https://
       en.opensuse.org/Libzypp/Dependencies> for more information.

   Automatically installed packages
       Packages  added  by  the dependency solver in order to resolve a user’s request are remembered as having been 'automatically installed'. They may later be removed, if no more
       user installed packages depend on them (e.g. by zypper remove --clean-deps).

       In the S+tatus+ column the search command distinguishes between user installed packages (i+) and automatically installed packages (i).

   Package File Conflicts
       File conflicts happen when two packages attempt to install files with the same name but different contents. This may happen if you are installing a newer version of a package
       without erasing the older version, of if two unrelated packages each install a file with the same name.

       As  checking  for file conflicts requires access to the full filelist of each package being installed, zypper will check for file conflict only if all packages are downloaded
       in advance (see --download-in-advance).

       As the reason for file conflicts usually is a poor package design or lack of coordination between the people building the packages, they are not easy to resolve. By using the
       --replacefiles option you can force zypper to replace the conflicting files. Nevertheless this may damage the package whose file gets replaced.

COMMANDS
       zypper  provides  a  number  of  commands.  Each command accepts the options listed in the GLOBAL OPTIONS section. These options must be specified before the command name. In
       addition, many commands have specific options, which are listed in this section. These command-specific options must be specified after the name of the command and before any
       of the command arguments.

       Zypper also provides limited support for writing extensions/subcommands in any language. See section SUBCOMMANDS for details.

   General Commands
       help [command]
           Shows  help texts. If invoked without any argument (just zypper or zypper help), zypper displays global help text which lists all available global options and commands. +
           If invoked with a command name argument, zypper displays help for the specified command, if such command exists. Long as well as short variants of the command  names  can
           be used. + For your convenience, zypper help can also be invoked in any of the following ways:

           $ zypper -h|--help [command]

           $ zypper [command] -h|--help

           shell (sh)
               Starts  a  shell  for entering multiple commands in one session. Exit the shell using exit, quit, or Ctrl-D. + The shell support is not complete so expect bugs there.
               However, there’s no urgent need to use the shell since libzypp became so fast thanks to the SAT solver and its tools (openSUSE 11.0), but  still,  you’re  welcome  to
               experiment with it.

   Package Management Commands
       info (if) [options] name...
           Displays  detailed  information  about  the  specified  packages.  + For each specified package, zypper finds the best available version in defined repositories and shows
           information for this package.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           -t, --type type
               Type of package (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types.

           --provides
               Show symbols the package provides.

           --requires
               Show symbols the package requires.

           --conflicts
               Show symbols the package conflicts with.

           --obsoletes
               Show symbols the package obsoletes.

           --recommends
               Show symbols the package recommends.

           --suggests
               Show symbols the package suggests.

           --supplements
               Show symbols the package supplements.

           Examples:

               $ zypper info workrave
                   Show information about package workrave

               $ zypper info -t patch libzypp
                   Show information about patch libzypp

               $ zypper info -t pattern lamp_server
                   Show information about pattern lamp_server

       install (in) [options] name|capability|rpm_file_uri...
           Install or update packages.

           The packages can be selected by their name or by a capability they provide.
               + A capability is formed by "NAME[.’ARCH'][ OP EDITION]", where ARCH is an architecture code, OP is one of <, <=, =, >=, or > and  EDITION  is  "VERSION[-’RELEASE']".
               For  example:  zypper=0.8.8-2  +  The  NAME  component  of  a  capability  is  not  only  a  package  name but any symbol provided by packages: /bin/vi, libcurl.so.3,
               perl(Time::ParseDate). Just remember to quote to protect the special characters from the shell, for example: zypper\>0.8.10 or 'zypper>0.8.10'. + If  EDITION  is  not
               specified,  the  newest  installable version will be installed. This also means that if the package is already installed and newer versions are available, it will get
               upgraded to the newest installable version. + If ARCH is not specified, or the last dot of the capability name string is  not  followed  by  known  architecture,  the
               solver  will  treat  the  whole  string  as  a capability name. If the ARCH is known, the solver will select a package matching that architecture and complain if such
               package cannot be found.

           Zypper is also able to install plain RPM files while trying to satisfy their dependencies using packages from defined repositories. You can install a plain  RPM  file  by
           specifying its location in the install command arguments either as a local path or an URI. E.g.:
               +  $  zypper  install ~/rpms/foo.rpm <http://some.site/bar.rpm>. + Zypper will report packages that it cannot find. Further, in interactive mode, zypper proceeds with
               installation of the rest of requested packages, and it will abort immediately in non-interactive mode. In  both  cases  zypper  returns  ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_CAP_NOT_FOUND
               after  finishing  the  operation.  +  Zypper  will  collect  the  files  in  a  temporary  plaindir  repository  and mark the respective packages for installation. If
               --download-only is used, the downloaded packages will be available in /var/cache/zypper/RPMS until you actually install them or call zypper clean to clear the package
               caches.

           In the install command, you can also specify packages you wish to remove by prepending their names by a - or ! character. For example:
               +  $  zypper install \!Firefox + In contrast to zypper remove Firefox which removes Firefox and its dependent packages, the install command will try to keep dependent
               packages installed by looking for Firefox alternatives. + Note that if you choose to use - with the first package you specify, you need  to  write  --  before  it  to
               prevent its interpretation as a command option: + $ zypper install --  -boring-game great-game great-game-manual

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number or URI. This option can be used multiple times. + Using --repo is discouraged as it currently hides
               unmentioned repositories from the resolver, leading to inexpertly decisions. In the future --repo will become an alias for --from.

           -t, --type type
               Type of package to install (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types. Use zypper se -t type [name] to look for available items
               of  this type and zypper info -t type name to display more detailed information about the item. + If patch is specified, zypper will install and/or remove packages to
               satisfy specified patch. This is a way to ensure that specific bug fix is installed. Use zypper list-patches to look for applicable patches. + If product  or  pattern
               are specified, zypper ensures that all required (and optionally recommended) packages are installed.

           -n, --name
               Select packages by their name, don’t try to select by capabilities.

           -f, --force
               Install even if the item is already installed (reinstall), downgraded or changes vendor or architecture.

           --oldpackage
               Allow  to  replace a newer item with an older one. Handy if you are doing a rollback. Unlike --force it will not enforce a reinstall, if the item is already installed
               with the requested version.

           --from alias|name|#|URI
               Select packages from specified repository. If strings specified as arguments to the install command match packages in repositories specified in this option, they will
               be marked for installation. This option currently implies --name, but allows using wildcards for specifying packages.

           -C, --capability
               Select packages by capabilities.

           -l, --auto-agree-with-licenses
               Automatically  say  yes  to  third party license confirmation prompt. By using this option, you choose to agree with licenses of all third-party software this command
               will install. This option is particularly useful for administrators installing the same set of packages on multiple machines (by an automated process)  and  have  the
               licenses confirmed before.

           --auto-agree-with-product-licenses
               Automatically  accept product licenses only. This is used by tools like SUSEconnect, which ask for confirmation before the product gets registered. So there’s no need
               to confirm the product license again at install time.

           --replacefiles
               Install the packages even if they replace files from other, already installed, packages. Default is to treat file conflicts as an error. --download-as-needed disables
               the file conflict check because access to all packages file lists is needed in advance in order to perform the check.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the installation, do not actually install any package. This option will add the --test option to the rpm commands run by the install command.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           --allow-unsigned-rpm
               Silently install unsigned rpm packages given as commandline parameters.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create   solver   test   case   for   debugging.   Use   this   option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were  not  solved  all  right  and  attach  the  resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force the solver to find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing  packages  (zypper  remove).  This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Download-and-install mode options:

           -d, --download-only
               Only download the packages for later installation.

           --download-in-advance
               First download all packages, then start installing.

           --download-in-heaps
               Download a minimal set of packages that can be installed without leaving the system in broken state, and install them. Then download and install  another  heap  until
               all  are  installed.  This  helps  to  keep  the  system  in  consistent  state without the need to download all packages in advance, which combines the advantages of
               --download-in-advance and --download-as-needed. This is the default mode. + NOTE: While the resolver is not capable of  building  heaps,  this  behaves  the  same  as
               --download-in-advance.

           --download-as-needed
               Download one package, install it immediately, and continue with the rest until all are installed.

           --download mode
               Use  the  specified  download-and-install  mode.  Available  modes  are:  only, in-advance, in-heaps, as-needed. See corresponding --download-’mode' options for their
               description.

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables. Setting this to no will not replace packages which have been renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages from foreign repos being changed to  the
               distributions version (or vice versa).

           Examples:

               $ zypper install -t pattern lamp_server
                   Install lamp_server pattern.

               $ zypper install --no-recommends gv
                   Install GhostScript viewer, but ignore recommended packages.

               $ zypper install virtualbox-ose-2.0.6

               $ zypper install virtualbox-ose=2.0.6

               $ zypper install virtualbox-ose = 2.0.6
                   Install version 2.0.6 of virtualbox-ose package.

       source-install (si) name...
           Install  specified  source  packages  and  their build dependencies. If the name of a binary package is given, the corresponding source package is looked up and installed
           instead. + This command will try to find the newest available versions of the source packages and uses rpm -i to install them, optionally together with all  the  packages
           that  are  required  to  build  the source package. The default location where rpm installs source packages to is /usr/src/packages/{SPECS,SOURCES}, but the values can be
           changed in your local rpm configuration. In case of doubt try executing rpm --eval "%{_specdir} and %{_sourcedir}". + Note that the source packages must be  available  in
           repositories you are using. You can check whether a repository contains any source packages using the following command:

               $ zypper search -t srcpackage -r alias|name|#|URI

           -d, --build-deps-only
               Install only build dependencies of specified packages.

           -D, --no-build-deps
               Don’t install build dependencies.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           --download-only
               Only download the packages, do not install.

           Examples:

               $ zypper si -d dbus-1
                   Install build dependencies of dbus-1 source package.

       verify (ve) [options]
           Check  whether  dependencies  of  installed packages are satisfied. + In case that any dependency problems are found, zypper suggests packages to install or remove to fix
           them.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the repair, do not actually do anything to the system.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create  solver  test  case  for  debugging.  Use  this  option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were   not   solved   all   right   and   attach   the   resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force  the  solver  to  find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing packages (zypper remove). This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables. Setting this to no will not replace packages which have been renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether  to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages from foreign repos being changed to the
               distributions version (or vice versa).

           This command also accepts the Download-and-install mode options described in the install command.

       install-new-recommends (inr) [options]
           Install newly added packages recommended by already installed ones. This command basically re-evaluates the recommendations of all installed packages  and  fills  up  the
           system  accordingly.  You  don’t  want  to  call this unconditionally on small or minimal systems, as it may easily add a large number of packages. + Called as zypper inr
           --no-recommends, it restricts the command to just look for packages supporting available hardware, languages or filesystems. Usefull after having added e.g. new  hardware
           or driver repos. This is also the default behavior if you have set [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the installation, do not actually install anything.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create   solver   test   case   for   debugging.   Use   this   option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were  not  solved  all  right  and  attach  the  resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force the solver to find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing  packages  (zypper  remove).  This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables. Setting this to no will not replace packages which have been renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages from foreign repos being changed to  the
               distributions version (or vice versa).

           This command also accepts the Download-and-install mode options described in the install command.

       remove (rm) [options] name...

       remove (rm) [options] --capability capability...
           Remove  (uninstall)  packages.  +  The  remove  command will uninstall the selected and their dependent packages. It will not try to install alternatives in order to keep
           dependent packages installed. If you want this, use zypper install !name. + The packages can be selected by their name or by a capability they  provide.  For  details  on
           package selection see the install command description.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           -t, --type type
               Type  of  package  (default:  package).  See section Package Types for list of available package types. + Since patches are not installed in sense of copying files or
               recording a database entry, they cannot be uninstalled, even though zypper shows them as installed. The installed status is determined solely based on  the  installed
               status of its required dependencies. If these dependencies are satisfied, the patch is rendered installed.

           -n, --name
               Select packages by their name (default).

           -C, --capability
               Select packages by capabilities.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the removal of packages, do not actually remove anything. This option will add the --test option to the rpm commands run by the remove command.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create   solver   test   case   for   debugging.   Use   this   option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were  not  solved  all  right  and  attach  the  resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force the solver to find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing  packages  (zypper  remove).  This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           -u, --clean-deps
               Automatically remove dependencies which become unneeded after removal of requested packages.

           -U, --no-clean-deps
               No automatic removal of unneeded dependencies.

   Update Management Commands
       list-updates (lu) [options]
           List available updates. + This command will list only installable updates, i.e. updates which have no dependency problems, or which do not  change  package  vendor.  This
           list is what the update command will propose to install. To list all packages for which newer version are available, use --all option.

           -t, --type type
               Type of package (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types. + If patch is specified, zypper acts as if the list-patches command
               was executed.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           -a, --all
               List all packages for which newer versions are available, regardless whether they are installable or not.

           --best-effort
               See the update command for description.

       update (up) [options] [packagename]...
           Update installed packages with newer versions, where possible. + This command will not update packages which would require change of package vendor unless the  vendor  is
           specified  in  /etc/zypp/vendors.d,  or  which would require manual resolution of problems with dependencies. Such non-installable updates will then be listed in separate
           section of the summary as "The following package updates will NOT be installed:". + To update individual packages, specify one or more package names. You can  use  the  *
           and ? wildcard characters in the package names to specify multiple packages matching the pattern.

           -t, --type type
               Type  of package (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types. + If patch is specified, zypper acts as if the patches command was
               executed.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           --skip-interactive
               This will skip interactive patches, that is, those that need reboot, contain a message, or update a package whose license needs to be confirmed.

           --with-interactive
               Avoid skipping of interactive patches when in non-interactive mode.

           -l, --auto-agree-with-licenses
               Automatically say yes to third party license confirmation prompt. By using this option, you choose to agree with licenses of all  third-party  software  this  command
               will  install.  This  option is particularly useful for administrators installing the same set of packages on multiple machines (by an automated process) and have the
               licenses confirmed before.

           --auto-agree-with-product-licenses
               Automatically accept product licenses only. This is used by tools like SUSEconnect, which ask for confirmation before the product gets registered. So there’s no  need
               to confirm the product license again at install time.

           --replacefiles
               Install the packages even if they replace files from other, already installed, packages. Default is to treat file conflicts as an error. --download-as-needed disables
               the fileconflict check because access to all packages filelists is needed in advance in order to perform the check.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the update, do not actually install or update any package. This option will add the --test option to the rpm commands run by the update command.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           --best-effort
               Do a best effort approach to update. This method does not explicitly select packages with best version and  architecture,  but  instead  requests  installation  of  a
               package with higher version than the installed one and leaves the rest on the dependency solver. This method is always used for packages, and is optional for products
               and patterns. It is not applicable to patches.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create  solver  test  case  for  debugging.  Use  this  option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were   not   solved   all   right   and   attach   the   resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force  the  solver  to  find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing packages (zypper remove). This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables. Setting this to no will not replace packages which have been renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether  to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages from foreign repos being changed to the
               distributions version (or vice versa).

           This command also accepts the Download-and-install mode options described in the install command description.

       list-patches (lp) [options]
           List all applicable patches. + This command is similar to zypper list-updates -t patch. + Note that optional arguments of some of the following options must be  specified
           using = instead of a space.

           -b, --bugzilla[='#[,...']]
               List applicable patches for all Bugzilla issues, or issues whose number matches the given string.

           --cve[='#[,...']]
               List applicable patches for all CVE issues, or issues whose number matches the given string.

           --date YYYY-MM-DD[,...]
               List only patches issued up to, but not including, the specified date.

           -g, --category category[,...]
               List only patches with this category. See section Package Types for a list of commonly used category values.

           --severity severity[,...]
               List only patches with this severity. See section Package Types for a list of commonly used severity values.

           --issues[=’string'[,...]]
               Look  for issues whose number, summary, or description matches the specified string. Issues found by number are displayed separately from those found by descriptions.
               In the latter case, use zypper patch-info patchname to get information about issues the patch fixes.

           -a, *--all
               By default, only patches that are applicable on your system are listed. This option causes all available released patches to be listed. This option  can  be  combined
               with all the rest of the list-updates command options.

           --with[out]-optional
               Whether applicable optional patches should be treated as needed or be excluded. The default is to exclude optional patches.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

       patch-check (pchk)
           Check for patches. Displays a count of applicable patches and how many of them have the security category. + See also the EXIT CODES section for details on exit status of
           0, 100, and 101 returned by this command.

           --updatestack-only
               Check only for patches which affect the package management itself.

           --with[out]-optional
               Whether applicable optional patches should be treated as needed or be excluded. The default is to exclude optional patches.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Check for patches only in the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

       patch [options]
           Install all available needed patches. + If there are patches that affect the package management itself, those will be installed first and you will be  asked  to  run  the
           patch command again. + This command is similar to zypper update -t patch.

           --updatestack-only
               Install only patches which affect the package management itself and exit.

           --with-update
               Additionally  try to update all packages not covered by patches. This is basically the same as running zypper update afterwards. + The option is ignored, if the patch
               command must update the update stack first, thus it can not be combined with the --updatestack-only option.

           --with[out]-optional
               Whether applicable optional patches should be treated as needed or be excluded. The default is to exclude optional patches.

           -b, --bugzilla #[,...]
               Install patch fixing a Bugzilla issue specified by number. Use list-patches --bugzilla command to get a list of applicable patches for specific issues.

           --cve #[,...]
               Install patch fixing a MITRE’s CVE issue specified by number. Use list-patches --cve command to get a list of applicable patches for specific issues.

           --date YYYY-MM-DD[,...]
               Install only patches issued up to, but not including, the specified date.

           -g, --category category[,...]
               Install only patches with this category. Use list-patches --category command to get a list of available patches with a specific category. See  section  Package  Types
               for a list of commonly used category values.

           --severity severity[,...]
               Install  only  patches  with this severity. Use list-patches --severity command to get a list of available patches with a specific severity. See section Package Types
               for a list of commonly used severity values.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           --skip-interactive
               This will skip interactive patches, that is, those that need reboot, contain a message, or update a package whose license needs to be confirmed.

           --with-interactive
               Avoid skipping of interactive patches when in non-interactive mode.

           -l, --auto-agree-with-licenses
               Automatically say yes to third party license confirmation prompt. By using this option, you choose to agree with licenses of all  third-party  software  this  command
               will  install.  This  option is particularly useful for administrators installing the same set of packages on multiple machines (by an automated process) and have the
               licenses confirmed before.

           --auto-agree-with-product-licenses
               Automatically accept product licenses only. This is used by tools like SUSEconnect, which ask for confirmation before the product gets registered. So there’s no  need
               to confirm the product license again at install time.

           --replacefiles
               Install the packages even if they replace files from other, already installed, packages. Default is to treat file conflicts as an error. --download-as-needed disables
               the fileconflict check because access to all packages filelists is needed in advance in order to perform the check.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the update, do not actually update.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create  solver  test  case  for  debugging.  Use  this  option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were   not   solved   all   right   and   attach   the   resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force  the  solver  to  find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing packages (zypper remove). This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables. Setting this to no will not replace packages which have been renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables.

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether  to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages from foreign repos being changed to the
               distributions version (or vice versa).

           This command also accepts the Download-and-install mode options described in the install command description.

       dist-upgrade (dup) [options]
           Perform a distribution upgrade. This command applies the state of (specified) repositories onto the system; upgrades (or even downgrades) installed packages  to  versions
           found  in  repositories, removes packages that are no longer in the repositories and pose a dependency problem for the upgrade, handles package splits and renames, etc. +
           If no repositories are specified via the --from option, zypper will do a global upgrade with all defined  repositories.  This  global  form  of  dup  will  also  consider
           unchanged  installed  packages  and  re-evaluate  their  dependencies.  This  can  be a problem if the system contains conflicting repositories, like repositories for two
           different distribution releases. This often happens if one forgets to remove an older release repository after adding a new one, say openSUSE 13.1 and  openSUSE  13.2.  +
           For all repositories which have the distribution version within their URL (like <https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/
           .www:lenstrwww:splitstr:nwww:splitstr:rfI>13.1/repo/oss) using the $releasever variable instead may be helpful ( <https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/
           .www:lenstrwww:splitstr:nwww:splitstr:rfB>$releasever/repo/oss).  The  variable  is  per default substituted by the current distributions version (13.1) This value can be
           overwritten using the --releasever global option. Calling zypper --releasever 13.2'...' will cause these repos to use the new location ( <https://download.opensuse.org/
           distribution/.www:lenstrwww:splitstr:nwww:splitstr:rfI>13.2/repo/oss)  without need to add/remove anything. Once the dup is performed, $releasever will default to the new
           distribution version. See section Repository Management for more info about variable substitution. + Note: distribution upgrades in openSUSE are currently only  supported
           between consecutive releases. To upgrade multiple releases, upgrade each consecutive release one at a time. For more details see <http://en.opensuse.org/
           SDB:System_upgrade> and the openSUSE release notes at <http://doc.opensuse.org/release-notes/>.

           --from alias|name|#|URI
               The option can be used multiple times and restricts the upgrade to the specified repositories only. Nevertheless all enabled repositories are visible to the  resolver
               and will be considered to satisfy dependency problems.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work  only  with  the  repository  specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. + Using --repo is discouraged as it currently hides unmentioned repositories from the
               resolver, leading to inexpertly decisions. This is because packages originally installed from the hidden repos will now be treated as orphaned or dropped. They can be
               silently removed if involved in a dependency conflict. In the future --repo will become an alias for --from.

           -l, --auto-agree-with-licenses
               Automatically  say  yes  to  third party license confirmation prompt. By using this option, you choose to agree with licenses of all third-party software this command
               will install. This option is particularly useful for administrators installing the same set of packages on multiple machines (by an automated process)  and  have  the
               licenses confirmed before.

           --auto-agree-with-product-licenses
               Automatically  accept product licenses only. This is used by tools like SUSEconnect, which ask for confirmation before the product gets registered. So there’s no need
               to confirm the product license again at install time.

           --replacefiles
               Install the packages even if they replace files from other, already installed, packages. Default is to treat file conflicts as an error. --download-as-needed disables
               the fileconflict check because access to all packages filelists is needed in advance in order to perform the check.

           -D, --dry-run
               Test the upgrade, do not actually install or update any package. This option will add the --test option to the rpm commands run by the dist-upgrade command.

           -y, --no-confirm
               Don’t require user interaction. Alias for the --non-interactive global option.

           --details
               Show the detailed installation summary.

           Solver related options:

           --debug-solver
               Create   solver   test   case   for   debugging.   Use   this   option,  if  you  think  the  dependencies  were  not  solved  all  right  and  attach  the  resulting
               /var/log/zypper.solverTestCase directory to your bug report. To use this option, simply add it to the problematic install or remove command.

           --force-resolution
               Force the solver to find a solution by allowing to remove packages with unfulfilled requirements. This is the default when removing  packages  (zypper  remove).  This
               option overrides --no-force-resolution in case both are specified on the command line.

           -R, --no-force-resolution
               Do not force the solver to find a solution. Instead, report dependency problems and prompt the user to resolve them manually. This is the default except when removing
               packages (zypper remove).

           --recommends
               Install also recommended packages in addition to the required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           --no-recommends
               Do not install recommended packages, but only required ones. The default behavior is determined by [zypp.conf:solver.onlyRequires].

           Expert Options:
               Don’t use them unless you know you need them.

           --[no-]allow-downgrade
               Whether to allow downgrading installed resolvables [zypp.conf:solver.dupAllowDowngrade].

           --[no-]allow-name-change
               Whether to allow changing the names of installed resolvables [zypp.conf:solver.dupAllowNameChange]. Setting this to no will  not  replace  packages  which  have  been
               renamed.

           --[no-]allow-arch-change
               Whether to allow changing the architecture of installed resolvables [zypp.conf:solver.dupAllowArchChange].

           --[no-]allow-vendor-change
               Whether  to allow changing the vendor of installed resolvables [zypp.conf:solver.dupAllowVendorChange]. Setting this to no might be useful if you do not want packages
               from foreign repos being dup’ed to the distributions version (or vice versa).

           This command also accepts the Download-and-install mode options described in the install command description.

           Examples:

               $ zypper dup --from factory --from packman
                   Upgrade the system to the latest versions provided by the factory and packman repositories.

   Query Commands
       search (se) [options] [querystring|capability]...
           Search for packages matching any of the given search strings. * and ? wildcard characters can be used within search strings. If the search string is enclosed in /   (e.g.
           /^k.*e$/)  it’s interpreted as a regular expression. See the install command for details about how to specify a capability. + Results of the search are printed in a table
           with columns S+tatus+, Name, Summary and Type of package. + In the detailed view (se -s) all available instances of matching packages are  shown;  each  version  in  each
           repository on a separate line, with columns S+tatus+, Name, Type, Version, Arch+itecture+ and Repository. For installed packages Repository shows either a repository that
           provides exactly the installed version of the package, or, if the exact version is not provided by any  known  repo,  (System  Packages)  (or  @System).  Those  installed
           packages not provided by any repo are often denoted as being unwanted, orphaned or dropped. + The S+tatus+ column can contain the following values:

           i+
               installed by user request

           i
               installed automatically (by the resolver, see section Automatically installed packages)

           v
               a different version is installed

           empty
               neither of the above cases

           .l
               is shown in the 2nd column if the item is locked (see section Package Locks Management)

                   The  v  status is only shown if the version or the repository matters (see --details or --repo), and the installed instance differs from the one listed in version
           or repository.
                   +
                   This command accepts the following options:

           --match-substrings
               Matches for search strings may be partial words (default).

           --match-words
               Matches for search strings may only be whole words.

           -x, --match-exact
               Searches for an exact name of the package.

           --provides
               Search for packages which provide the search strings.

           --requires
               Search for packages which require the search strings.

           --recommends
               Search for packages which recommend the search strings.

           --suggests
               Search for packages which suggest the search strings.

           --conflicts
               Search for packages conflicting with the search strings.

           --obsoletes
               Search for packages which obsolete the search strings.

           --supplements
               Search for packages which supplement the search strings.

           -n, --name
               Useful together with dependency options, otherwise searching in package name is default.

           -f, --file-list
               Search in the file list of packages. Note that the full file list is available for installed packages only. For remote packages only an abstract of their file list is
               available within the metadata (files containing /etc/, /bin/, or /sbin/).

           -d, --search-descriptions
               Search also in summaries and descriptions.

           -C, --case-sensitive
               Perform case-sensitive search.

           -i, --installed-only
               Show only installed packages.

           -u, --not-installed-only
               Show only packages which are not installed. + The old option name --uninstalled-only is still acceptable, but should be considered deprecated.

           -t, --type type
               Search  only  for  packages  of  specified  type. See section Package Types for a list of available package types. Multiple --type options are allowed. + See also the
               type-specific query commands like packages, patterns, etc.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Work only with the repository specified by the alias, name, number, or URI. This option can be used multiple times.

           --sort-by-name
               Sort packages by name (default).

           --sort-by-repo
               Sort packages by repository, not by name.

           -s, --details
               Show all available versions of matching packages, each version in each repository on a separate line.

           -v, --verbose
               Like --details with additional information where the search has matched (useful when searching for dependencies, e.g. --provides).

           Examples:

               $ zypper se 'yast*'
                   Search for YaST packages (quote the string to prevent the shell from expanding the wildcard).

               $ zypper se -s --match-exact kernel-default
                   Show all available versions of package kernel-default

               $ zypper se -dC --match-words RSI
                   Look for RSI acronym (case-sensitively), also in summaries and descriptions.

       packages (pa) [options] [repository]...
           List all available packages or all packages from specified repositories. Similar to zypper search -s -t package.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Just another means to specify repositories.

           -i, --installed-only
               Show only installed packages.

           -u, --not-installed-only
               Show only packages which are not installed. + The old option name --uninstalled-only is still acceptable, but should be considered deprecated.

           --orphaned
               Show packages which are orphaned (without repository).

           --suggested
               Show packages which are suggested.

           --recommended
               Show packages which are recommended.

           --unneeded
               Show packages which are unneeded.

       patches (pch) [options] [repository]...
           List all available patches from specified repositories, including those not needed. Short for zypper lp -a.

           -r, --repo alias|name'|#|URI
               Just another means to specify repositories.

       patterns (pt) [options] [repository]...
           List all available patterns or all patterns from specified repositories. Similar to zypper search -s -t pattern.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Just another means to specify repositories.

           -i, --installed-only
               Show only installed patterns.

           -u, --not-installed-only
               Show only patterns which are not installed. + The old option name --uninstalled-only is still acceptable, but should be considered deprecated.

       products (pd) [options] [repository]...
           List all available products or all products from specified repositories. Similar to zypper search -s -t product, but shows also the type of the product (base, add-on).

           -r, --repo 'alias|name|#|URI
               Just another means to specify repositories.

           -i, --installed-only
               Show only installed products.

           -u, --not-installed-only
               Show only products which are not installed. + The old option name --uninstalled-only is still acceptable, but should be considered deprecated.

           --xmlfwd tag
               XML output only: Literally forward the XML tag, if it is found in an installed products .prod-file (in /etc/products.d). +  Using  this  option,  for  each  installed
               product  an  <xmlfwd>  node  will  be  created  inside  the  <product> output node of the product. + Tag defines the name (or /-separated path) of a xml-tag inside an
               installed products .prod-file. If the tag is present inside the products .prod-file, the tag and it’s content is literally forwarded into the products <xmlfwd> output
               node. + The option may be specified multiple times.

           Examples:

               $ zypper -x pd --xmlfwd name --xmlfwd register/target

       what-provides (wp) capability
           List all packages providing the specified capability. See also the install command for info about specifying capabilities.

           The command line is automatically transformed into the appropriate search command, e.g.:

               $ zypper what-provides 'zypper>1.6'

               $ zypper se --provides --match-exact 'zypper>1.6'

   Repository Management
       Zypper is able to work with YaST, RPM-MD (yum) software repositories, and plain directories containing .rpm files.

       Repositories  are  primarily  identified  using  their URI or alias. Alias serves as a shorthand for the long URI or name of the repository. The name of the repository should
       briefly describe the repository and is shown to the user in tables and messages. The name is not required, and if not known, the alias is shown instead. The alias is required
       and uniquely identifies the repository on the system.

       The  alias, name, URI, or the number from zypper repos list can be used to specify a repository as an argument of various zypper commands and options like refresh, --repo, or
       --from.

       Apart from the above, repositories have several other properties which can be set using the commands described in this section below, or by manually  editing  the  repository
       definition files (.repo files, see section FILES).

   Variable substitution:
       You can use the following variables within a .repo or .service files name and URI values:

       $arch
           Use this variable to refer to the system’s CPU architecture.

       $basearch
           Use this variable to refer to the base architecture of the system. For example, iX86 machines have a base architecture of i386, while AMD64 and Intel64 have x86_64.

       $releasever, $releasever_major, $releasever_minor
           Use  this variable to refer to the version of your openSUSE or SUSE Linux. The value is obtained from the /product/version XML-node in /etc/products.d/baseproduct. + This
           is useful for related repositories like packman (<http://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/packman/suse/$releasever>), which shall always fit the installed distribution, even after a
           distribution upgrade. To help performing a distribution upgrade, the value of $releasever can be overwritten using the --releasever global option. This way you can easily
           switch all repositories using $releasever to the new version (provided the  server  layouts  did  not  change  and  new  repos  are  already  available).  +  In  addition
           $releasever_major will be set to the leading portion up to (but not including) the 1st dot; $releasever_minor to the trailing portion after the 1st dot. If there’s no dot
           in $releasever, $releasever_major is the same as $releasever and $releasever_minor is empty.

       Custom Variables
           A custom repository variable is defined by creating a file in /etc/zypp/vars.d. The variable name equals the file name. The files first line (up to but not including  the
           newline character) defines the variables value. Valid variable(file) names consist of alphanumeric chars and underscore only.

       Remember to protect the $ when using these variables on a shell command line:
           zypper ar -f <http://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/packman/suse/.www:lenstrwww:splitstr:nwww:splitstr:rfB>\$releasever packman

       If a variable is followed by an alphanumeric character or underscore it needs to be enclosed in {}:
           zypper ar -f <http://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/packman/suse/.www:lenstrwww:splitstr:nwww:splitstr:rfB>\${’releasever'}_packman

       Bash style definition of default ${’variable':-’word'} and alternate ${’variable':+’word'} values:
           SLE-${’releasever_major'}${’releasever_minor':+-SP-$releasever_minor}

       To check where you already use $releasever call:
           zypper --releasever @--HERE--@ lr -u

       NOTE:
           Variable  substitution  within  an URIs authority is limited to host and port. Bash style definition of default and alternate values is not supported. No variables can be
           used in an URIs scheme, user and password.

   Supported URI formats:
       scheme: @]host[:’port']] /’path' [?’query'] [#’fragment']
           Special characters occurring in URI components (like a @ in a password) must be %-encoded (%40).

       CD or DVD drive
           Optionally with devices list for probing.

           cd:///

           dvd:/subdir'?devices=/dev/sr0,/dev/sr1'

           FTP/HTTP/HTTPS directory tree
               The ftp URL scheme supports absolute and relative paths to the default ftp server directory (RFC1738, Section 3.2.2). To use an absolute path, you have to prepend the
               path  with  an  additional  slash,  what  results  in a /%2f combination (second / encoded to %2f) at the begin of the URL path. This is important, especially in user
               authenticated ftp, where the users home is usually the default directory of the server (except when the server chroots into the  users  home  directory).  +  Explicit
               proxy settings may be passed via optional parameters proxy, proxyport, proxyuser and proxypass. + HTTP authentication methods to use can be defined as comma separated
               list via optional parameter auth. Valid methods are e.g. basic, digest, ntlm, negotiate. Note, that this list depends on the list of methods  supported  by  the  curl
               library. + SSL verification behavior can be changed using the ssl_verify option (this should be used with care). Valid values are yes (the secure default), host, peer
               or no. Host just checks that the "Common Name" field or a "Subject Alternate Name" field in the servers certificate matches the  host  name  in  the  URL.  Peer  just
               verifies whether the certificate provided by the server is authentic against the chain of digital signatures found in ssl_capath. No performs no checks at all. Yes is
               the secure default, performing host and peer check. + For SSL client certificate authentication use the options ssl_clientcert to define the path to  the  ssl  client
               certificate  and  ssl_clientkey  to  define  the  path  to  the  SSL  client  key.  Use  ssl_capath  to  change  the directory holding the CA certificates (default is
               /etc/ssl/certs).

           <ftp://user:pass@server/path/to/media/dir>

           <ftp://user:pass@server/%2fhome/user/path/to/media/dir>

           <http://user:pass@server/path>

           <https://user:pass@server/path>'?proxy=foo&proxyuser=me&proxypass=pw'

           <https://server/path>'?ssl_clientcert=/entitlement/1234.pem&ssl_clientkey=/entitlement/1234-key.pem'

           Disk volume (partition)
               Mandatory device parameter specifying the name of the block device to mount. The name of the optional filesystem defaults to "auto".

           hd:/subdir?device=/dev/sda1'&filesystem=reiserfs'

           Local directory tree

           dir:/directory/name

           Media in an ISO image (loopback mounted)
               + Mandatory iso parameter specifying the name of the iso file. Optional url parameter specifying the URL to the  directory  containing  the  iso  file.  Optional  mnt
               parameter specifying the preferred attach point for the source media url. Optional filesystem name of the filesystem used in the iso file. Defaults to "auto".

           iso:/?iso=CD1.iso'&url=nfs://server/path/to/media'

           iso:/?iso=CD1.iso'&url=hd:/?device=/dev/hda'

           iso:/subdir?iso=DVD1.iso'&url=nfs://nfs-server/directory&mnt=/nfs/attach/point&filesystem=udf'

           NFS exported directory tree
               To use NFSv4 either use schema tnfsv4:// or pass an optional parameter type=nfs4. Additional mountoptions can be passed as comma separated list. Defaults to "ro".

           nfs://nfs-server/exported/path

           nfs://nfs-server/exported/path'?mountoptions=ro&type=nfs4'

           nfs4://nfs-server/exported/path'?mountoptions=ro'

           CIFS/SMB directory tree
               There  is  no  difference  between cifs and smb scheme (any more). In both cases the cifs filesystem is used. Additional mountoptions can be passed as comma separated
               list. Defaults to "ro,guest". Specify "noguest" to turn off "guest". This is necessary if Samba is configured to reject guest connections.  +  Optional  workgroup  or
               domain parameter set the name of the workgroup. As alternative to passing username:password in the URI authority the parameters user and pass can be used.

           smb://servername/share/path/on/the/share

           cifs://usern:passw@servername/share/path/on/the/share'?mountoptions=ro,noguest'

           cifs://usern:passw@servername/share/path/on/the/share'?workgroup=mygroup'

           cifs://servername/share/path/on/the/share'?user=usern&pass=passw'

           OpenSUSE Build Build Service (OBS) repositories
               Zypper also accepts special URIs identifying openSUSE Build Service (OBS) repositories in the addrepo command. These URIs have the form of obs://’project'/[platform],
               where project is the name of the OBS project and  platform  is  the  target  platform  (OS)  for  which  the  repository  is  intended.  +  If  platform  is  omitted,
               openSUSE_$releasever  is  used unless a value for obs.platform is defined in zypper.conf. If you are following openSUSE_Factory or openSUSE_Tumbleweed you may need to
               set these as your default platform. But we can only guess, how the directory containing the repository that fits your distribution is named on the server. In case  of
               doubt you need to look up the right URL in a browser.

           obs://zypp:Head/

           obs://zypp:Head/openSUSE_Factory

           obs://zypp:Head/openSUSE_Factory_Staging_Gcc49_standard

                {nop}
               ~~~~~~

           addrepo (ar) [options] URI alias

           addrepo (ar) [options] FILE.repo
               Add  a  new  repository  specified  by  URI  and assign specified alias to it or specify URI to a .repo file. + Newly added repositories have auto-refresh disabled by
               default (except for repositories imported from a .repo, having the auto-refresh enabled). To enable auto-refresh use addrepo  -f,  or  the  --refresh  option  of  the
               modifyrepo  command.  +  Also,  this  command does not automatically refresh the newly added repositories. The repositories will get refreshed when used for the first
               time, or you can use the refresh command after finishing your modifications with *repo commands.

               -r, --repo file.repo
                   Read URI and alias from specified .repo file

               -c, --check
                   Probe given URI.

               -C, --no-check
                   Don’t probe URI, probe later during refresh.

               -n, --name name
                   Specify descriptive name for the repository.

               -e, --enable
                   Enable the repository (the default).

               -d, --disable
                   Add the repository as disabled. Repositories are added as enabled by default.

               -f, --refresh
                   Enable autorefresh of the repository. The autorefresh is disabled by default when adding new repositories.

               -F, --no-refresh
                   Disable auto-refresh for the repository.

               -p, --priority positive-integer
                   Set the priority of the repository. Priority of 1 is the highest, the higher the number the lower the priority. -p 0 will set the priority  back  to  the  default
                   (99).  Packages  from  repositories  with  higher priority will be preferred even in case there is a higher installable version available in the repository with a
                   lower priority.

               -k, --keep-packages
                   Enable RPM files caching for the repository.

               -K, --no-keep-packages
                   Disable RPM files caching.

               -g, --gpgcheck
                   Enable GPG check for this repository. The behavior as described in section GPG checks.

               --gpgcheck-strict
                   Enable strict GPG check for this repository. Even packages from signed repositories need a valid GPG signature and using unsigned packages must be confirmed.

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned
                   Short hand for --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-repo --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-package

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-repo
                   Enable GPG check but allow the repository metadata to be unsigned.

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-package
                   Enable GPG check but allow installing unsigned packages from this repository.

               -G, --no-gpgcheck
                   Disable GPG check for this repository. + Disabling GPG checks is not recommended. Signing data enables the recipient to  verify  that  no  modifications  occurred
                   after the data were signed. Accepting data with no, wrong or unknown signature can lead to a corrupted system and in extreme cases even to a system compromise.

               --default-gpgcheck
                   Use  the  global  GPG  check settings defined in /etc/zypp/zypp.conf. This is the default. + Unless you have modified your zypp.conf settings, this is the same as
                   --gpgcheck, the behavior as described in section GPG checks.

               Examples:

                   $ zypper ar -c -n 'Packman 11.1 repo' <http://packman.iu-bremen.de/suse/11.1> packman
                       Add a HTTP repository, probe it, name it Packman 11.1 repo, and use packman as alias.

                   $ zypper ar <https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/zypp:/svn/openSUSE_Factory/zypp:svn.repo>

                   $ zypper ar myreposbackup.repo
                       Add repositories from a .repo file.

           removerepo (rr) [options] alias|name|#|URI...
               Delete repositories specified by aliases, names, numbers, URIs or one of the aggregate options.

               --loose-auth
                   Ignore user authentication data in the URI

               --loose-query
                   Ignore query string in the URI

               -a, --all
                   Apply changes to all repositories.

               -l, --local
                   Apply changes to all local repositories.

               -t, --remote
                   Apply changes to all remote repositories (http/https/ftp).

               -m, --medium-type type
                   Apply changes to repositories of specified type. The type corresponds to the repository URI scheme identifier like http, dvd, etc. You can find complete  list  of
                   valid types at <http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Libzypp_URIs>.

           repos (lr) [options] [repo]...
               List  all  defined  repositories  or show detailed information about those specified as arguments + The following data can be printed for each repository found on the
               system: # (repository number), Alias (unique identifier), Name, Enabled (whether the repository is enabled), GPG Check (whether GPG check for repository metadata  (r)
               and/or  downloaded  rpm  packages  (p)  is  enabled), Refresh (whether auto-refresh is enabled for the repository), Priority, Type (repository meta-data type: rpm-md,
               yast2, plaindir). Which of the data is shown is determined by command line options listed below and the main.repoListColumns setting from zypper.conf. By default,  #,
               Alias,  Name, Enabled, GPG Check and Refresh is shown. + Repository number is a unique identifier of the repository in current set of repositories. If you add, remove
               or change a repository, the numbers may change. Keep that in mind when using the numbers with the repository handling commands. On the other  hand,  using  the  alias
               instead of the number is always safe. + To show detailed information about specific repositories, specify them as arguments, either by alias, name, number from simple
               zypper lr, or by URI; e.g. fB zypper lr factory, or zypper lr 2.

               -e, --export FILE.repo|-
                   This option causes zypper to write repository definition of all defined repositories into a single file in repo file format. If - is specified instead of  a  file
                   name, the repositories will be written to the standard output.

               -a, --alias
                   Add alias column to the output.

               -n, --name
                   Add name column to the output.

               -u, --uri
                   Add base URI column to the output.

               -p, --priority
                   Add repository priority column to the output.

               -r, --refresh
                   Add the autorefresh column to the output.

               -d, --details
                   Show more information like URI, priority, type, etc.

               -E, --show-enabled-only
                   Show enabled repositories only.

               -U, --sort-by-uri
                   Add base URI column and sort the list it.

               -P, --sort-by-priority
                   Add repository priority column and sort the list by it.

               -A, --sort-by-alias
                   Sort the list by alias.

               -N, --sort-by-name
                   Sort the list by name.

               Examples:

                   $ zypper repos -e myreposbackup.repo
                       Backup your repository setup:

                   $ zypper lr -pu
                       List repositories with their URIs and priorities:

           renamerepo (nr) alias|name|#|URI new-alias
               Assign new alias to the repository specified by alias, name, number, or URI.

               Examples:

                   $ zypper nr 8 myrepo
                       Rename repository number 8 to myrepo (useful if the repo has some dreadful alias which is not usable on the command line).

           modifyrepo (mr) options alias|name|#|URI...

           modifyrepo (mr) options --all|--remote|--local|--medium-type
               Modify properties of repositories specified by alias, name, number, or URI or one of the aggregate options.

               -n, --name name
                   Set a descriptive name for the repository.

               -e, --enable
                   Enable the repository.

               -d, --disable
                   Disable the repository.

               -f, --refresh (legacy: -r)
                   Enable auto-refresh for the repository.

               -F, --no-refresh (legacy: -R)
                   Disable auto-refresh for the repository.

               -p, --priority positive-integer
                   Set  the  priority  of  the repository. Priority of 1 is the highest, the higher the number the lower the priority. -p 0 will set the priority back to the default
                   (99). Packages from repositories with higher priority will be preferred even in case there is a higher installable version available  in  the  repository  with  a
                   lower priority.

               -k, --keep-packages
                   Enable RPM files caching.

               -K, --no-keep-packages
                   Disable RPM files caching.

               -g, --gpgcheck
                   Enable GPG check for this repository. The behavior as described in section GPG checks.

               --gpgcheck-strict
                   Enable strict GPG check for this repository. Even packages from signed repositories need a valid GPG signature and using unsigned packages must be confirmed.

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned
                   Short hand for --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-repo --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-package

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-repo
                   Enable GPG check but allow the repository metadata to be unsigned.

               --gpgcheck-allow-unsigned-package
                   Enable GPG check but allow installing unsigned packages from this repository.

               -G, --no-gpgcheck
                   Disable  GPG  check  for  this  repository. + Disabling GPG checks is not recommended. Signing data enables the recipient to verify that no modifications occurred
                   after the data were signed. Accepting data with no, wrong or unknown signature can lead to a corrupted system and in extreme cases even to a system compromise.

               --default-gpgcheck
                   Use the global GPG check settings defined in /etc/zypp/zypp.conf. This is the default. + Unless you have modified your zypp.conf settings, this  is  the  same  as
                   --gpgcheck, the behavior as described in section GPG checks.

               -a, --all
                   Apply changes to all repositories.

               -l, --local
                   Apply changes to all local repositories.

               -t, --remote
                   Apply changes to all remote repositories (http/https/ftp).

               -m, --medium-type type
                   Apply  changes  to repositories of specified type. The type corresponds to the repository URI scheme identifier like http, dvd, etc. You can find complete list of
                   valid types at <http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Libzypp_URIs>.

               Examples:

                   $ zypper mr -kt
                       Enable keeping of packages for all remote repositories.

                   $ zypper mr -er updates
                       Enable repository updates and switch on autorefresh for the repo.

                   $ zypper mr -da
                       Disable all repositories.

           refresh (ref) [alias|name|#|URI]...
               Refresh repositories specified by their alias, name, number, or URI. If no repositories are specified, all enabled repositories will be refreshed.

               -f, --force
                   Force a complete refresh of specified repositories. This option will cause both the download of raw metadata and parsing of the metadata  to  be  forced  even  if
                   everything indicates a refresh is not needed.

               -b, --force-build
                   Force only reparsing of cached metadata and rebuilding of the database. Raw metadata download will not be forced.

               -d, --force-download
                   Force only download of current copy of repository metadata. Parsing and rebuild of the database will not be forced.

               -B, --build-only
                   Only  parse  the  metadata  and  build  the database, don’t download raw metadata into the cache. This will enable you to repair damaged database from cached data
                   without accessing network at all.

               -D, --download-only
                   Only download the raw metadata, don’t parse it or build the database.

               -s, --services
                   Refresh also services before refreshing repositories.

           clean (cc) [options] [alias|name|#|URI]...
               Clean the local caches for all known or specified repositories. By default, only caches of downloaded packages are cleaned.

               -m, --metadata
                   Clean repository metadata cache instead of package cache.

               -M, --raw-metadata
                   Clean repository raw metadata cache instead of package cache.

               -a, --all
                   Clean both repository metadata and package caches.

   Service Management
       The services, addservice, removeservice, modifyservice, and refresh-services commands serve for manipulating services. A service is specified by its URI and needs to  have  a
       unique alias defined (among both services and repositories).

       Standalone  repositories  (not  belonging to any service) are treated like services, too. The ls command will list them, ms command will modify them, etc. Repository specific
       options, like --keep-packages are not available here, though. You can use repository handling commands to manipulate them.

       addservice (as) [options] URI alias
           Adds a service specified by URI to the system. The alias must be unique and serves to identify the service. + Newly added services are not  refreshed  automatically.  Use
           the  refresh-services  command  to  refresh  them.  Zypper  does  not  access  the service URI when adding the service, so the type of the services is unknown until it is
           refreshed. +

       -n, --name name
           Specify descriptive name for the service.

       -e, --enable
           Enable the service (this is the default).

       -d, --disable
           Add the service as disabled.

       -f, --refresh
           Enable auto-refresh of the service.

       -F, --no-refresh
           Disable auto-refresh of the service.

       removeservice (rs) [options] alias|name|#|URI...
           Remove specified service from the system. Removing a service will also remove of all of its repositories.

           --loose-auth
               Ignore user authentication data in the URI.

           --loose-query
               Ignore query string in the URI.

       modifyservice (ms) options alias|name|#|URI

       modifyservice (ms) options --all|--remote|--local|--medium-type
           Modify properties of specified services.

           Common Options
               These options are common to all types of services and repositories.

           -n, --name name
               Set a descriptive name for the service.

           -e, --enable
               Enable a disabled service.

           -d, --disable
               Disable the service (but don’t remove it).

           -f, --refresh  (legacy: -r)
               Enable auto-refresh of the service.

           -F, --no-refresh  (legacy: -R)
               Disable auto-refresh of the service.

           -a, --all
               Apply changes to all services.

           -l, --local
               Apply changes to all local services.

           -t, --remote
               Apply changes to all remote services.

           -m, --medium-type type
               Apply changes to services of specified type.

           RIS Service Specific Options
               These options are ignored by services other than Repository Index Services.

           -i, --ar-to-enable alias
               Schedule an RIS service repository to be enabled at next service refresh.

           -I, --ar-to-disable alias
               Schedule an RIS service repository to be disabled at next service refresh.

           -j, --rr-to-enable alias
               Remove a RIS service repository to enable.

           -J, --rr-to-disable "alias'
               Remove a RIS service repository to disable.

           -k, --cl-to-enable
               Clear the list of RIS repositories to enable.

           -K, --cl-to-disable
               Clear the list of RIS repositories to disable.

       services (ls) [options]
           List services defined on the system.

           -u, --uri
               Show also base URI of repositories.

           -p, --priority
               Show also repository priority.

           -d, --details
               Show more information like URI, priority, type.

           -r, --with-repos
               Show also repositories belonging to the services.

           -P, --sort-by-priority
               Sort the list by repository priority.

           -E, --show-enabled-only
               Show enabled services only. If used together with --with-repos a disabled services owning (manually) enabled repositories are shown as well.

           -U, --sort-by-uri
               Sort the list by URI.

           -N, --sort-by-name
               Sort the list by name.

       refresh-services (refs) [options] alias|name|#|URI...
           Refreshing a service means executing the service’s special task. + RIS services add, remove, or modify repositories on  your  system  based  on  current  content  of  the
           repository  index.  A  differing  enabled/disabled  state  caused  by  manually  calling  modify-repo  on  a  service  repository  however will not be reverted unless the
           --restore-status option is used, or the repository index explicitly requests the change. + Services only manage defined repositories, they do not refresh them. To refresh
           also repositories, use --with-repos option or the refresh command.

           -f, --force
               Force  a  complete refresh of specified services. This option will cause both the download of raw metadata and parsing of the metadata to be forced even if everything
               indicates a refresh is not needed.

           -r, --with-repos
               Refresh also the service repositories.

           -R, --restore-status
               Also restore service repositories enabled/disabled state to the repository index default. Useful after you manually changed some service repositories enabled state.

   Package Locks Management
       Package locks serve the purpose of preventing changes to the set of installed packages on the system. The locks are stored in form of a query  in  /etc/zypp/locks  file  (see
       also  locks(5)).  Packages  matching  this  query  are  then forbidden to change their installed status; an installed package can’t be removed, not installed package can’t be
       installed. When requesting to install or remove such locked package, you will get a dependency problem dialog.

       locks (ll)
           List currently active package locks.

           -m, --matches
               Show the number of resolvables matched by each lock. This option requires loading the repositories.

           -s, --solvables
               List the resolvables matched by each lock. This option requires loading the repositories.

       addlock (al) [options] package-name...
           Add a package lock. Specify packages to lock by exact name or by a glob pattern using * and ? wildcard characters.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Restrict the lock to the specified repository.

           -t, --type type
               Lock only packages of specified type (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types.

       removelock (rl) [options] lock-number|package-name...
           Remove specified package lock. Specify the lock to remove by its number obtained with zypper locks or by the package name.

           -r, --repo alias|name|#|URI
               Restrict the lock to the specified repository.

           -t, --type type
               Restrict the lock to packages of specified type (default: package). See section Package Types for list of available package types.

       cleanlocks (cl)
           Remove unused locks. + This command looks for locks that do not currently (with regard to repositories used) lock any package and for each such lock it asks user  whether
           to remove it.

       Locale  Management  ~~~~~~~  These  commands  give  information  about  requested locales and the possibilty to manage those. A locale is defined by a language code. For many
       packages there are locale dependent packages available which provide translations or dictionaries. To get these installed, the locale for the desired language must be  marked
       as requested by the package manager library.

       locales (lloc) [OPTIONS] [LOCALE] ...
           List  requested  locales.  Called  without  argument,  lists  the  locales which are already marked as requested. Specifying certain locale(s) prints information only for
           this(these).

           -a, --all
               List all available locales.

           -p, --packages
               Show corresponding packages.

       addlocale (aloc) [OPTIONS] <LOCALE> ...
           Add specified locale(s) to the list of requested locales..

           -n, --no-packages
               Do not install corresponding packages.

       removelocale (rloc) [OPTIONS] <LOCALE> ...
           Remove specified locale(s) from the list of requested locales..

           -n, --no-packages
               Do not remove corresponding packages.

       Examples:

           $ zypper locales
               List requested locales.

           $ zypper locales --packages de en
               Get the lists of packages which are available for de and en (exact match).

           $ zypper locales en_
               Get all locales with lang code en that have their own country code, excluding the fallback en.

           $ zypper locales en*
               Get all locales with lang code en with or without country code.

           $ zypper aloc --packages de_CH
               Request de_CH and install language dependent packages.

   Other Commands
       versioncmp (vcmp) version1 version2
           Compare the versions supplied as arguments and tell whether version1 is older or newer than version2 or the two  version  strings  match.  +  The  default  output  is  in
           human-friendly form. If --terse global option is used, the result is an integer number, negative/positive if version1 is older/newer than version2, zero if they match.

           -m, --match
               Takes missing release number as any release.

               For example:

                   $ zypper vcmp -m 0.15.3 0.15.3-2
                       0.15.3 matches 0.15.3-2

                   $ zypper vcmp 0.15.3 0.15.3-2
                       0.15.3 is older than 0.15.3-2

       targetos (tos)
           Shows  the  ID  string  of the target operating system. The string has a form of distroname-architecture. The string is determined by libzypp, the distroname is read from
           (current-rootdir)/etc/products.d/baseproduct and the architecture is determined from uname and CPU flags.

       licenses
           Prints a report about licenses and 'EULA’s of installed packages to standard output. + First, a list of all packages and their licenses and/or EULAs  is  shown.  This  is
           followed by a summary, including the total number of installed packages, the number of installed packages with EULAs that required a confirmation from the user. Since the
           EULAs are not stored on the system and can only be read from repository metadata, the summary includes also the number of installed packages that have  their  counterpart
           in  repositories.  The  report  ends  with  a  list  of  all  licenses  uses by the installed packages. + This command can be useful for companies redistributing a custom
           distribution (like appliances) to figure out what licenses they are bound by.

       download
           Download rpms specified on the commandline to a local directory. + Per default packages are  downloaded  to  the  libzypp  package  cache  (/var/cache/zypp/packages;  for
           non-root  users $XDG_CACHE_HOME/zypp/packages), but this can be changed by using the global --pkg-cache-dir option. + Parsable XML-output produced by zypper --xmlout will
           include a <download-result> node for each package zypper tried to download. Upon success the location of the downloaded package is found in  the  path  attribute  of  the
           <localfile> subnode (xpath: download-result/localpath@path): +

                   <download-result>
                     <solvable>
                       <kind>package</kind>
                       <name>zypper</name>
                       <edition epoch="0" version="1.9.17" release="26.1"/>
                       <arch>x86_64</arch>
                       <repository name="repo-oss-update (13.1)" alias="openSUSE:repo-oss-update"/>
                     </solvable>
                     <localfile path="/var/cache/zypp/pac.../zypper-1.9.17-26.1.x86_64.rpm"/>
                   </download-result>

       --all-matches
                   Download all versions matching the commandline arguments. Otherwise only the best version of each matching package is downloaded.

       --dry-run
           Don’t download any package, just report what would be done.

       source-download
           Download source rpms for all installed packages to a local directory.

           -d, --directory dir
               Download all source rpms to this directory. Default is /var/cache/zypper/source-download.

           --delete
               Delete extraneous source rpms in the local directory. This is the default.

           --no-delete
               Do not delete extraneous source rpms.

           --status
               Don’t download any source rpms, but show which source rpms are missing or extraneous.

       ps
           After each upgrade or removal of packages, there may be running processes on the system which continue to use meanwhile deleted files. zypper ps lists all processes using
           deleted files, together with the corresponding files, and a service name hint, in case it’s a known service. This gives a hint which services may  need  to  be  restarted
           after an update. Usually programs which continue to use deleted shared libraries. The list contains the following information:

           PID
               ID of the process

           PPID
               ID of the parent process

           UID
               ID of the user running the process

           Login
               Login name of the user running the process

           Command
               Command used to execute the process

           Service
               Service name, if command is associated with a system service

           Files
               The list of the deleted files

               -s, --short
                   Create  a  short  table  not  showing  the deleted files. Given twice, show only processes which are associated with a system service. Given three times, list the
                   associated system service names only.

               --print format
                   For each associated system service print format on the standard output, followed by a newline. Any %s directive in format is replaced by the system service name.

               -d, --debugFile filename
                   Output a file with all proc entries that make it into the final set of used open files. This can be submitted as additional information in a bug report.

               Examples:

           $ zypper ps -ss
               Show only processes associated with a system service.

           $ zypper ps -sss
               Short for zypper ps --print "%s"; list services which might need a restart.

           $ zypper ps --print "systemctl status %s"
               Let zypper print the commands to retrieve status information for services which might need a restart.

       needs-rebooting
           Checks if the reboot-needed flag was set by a previous update or install of a core library or service. + The reboot-needed flag is set when a package  from  a  predefined
           list  (/etc/zypp/needreboot)  is  updated  or  installed.  Exit  code  ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_REBOOT_NEEDED  indicates that a reboot is needed, otherwise the exit code is set to
           ZYPPER_EXIT_OK.

   Subommands
       subcommand
           Lists available subcommands in /usr/lib/zypper/commands and from elsewhere on your $PATH. See section SUBCOMMANDS for details.

GLOBAL OPTIONS
       -h, --help
           Help. If a command is specified together with --help option, command specific help is displayed.

       -V, --version
           Print zypper version number and exit.

       -c, --config file
           Use the specified zypper config file instead of the default zypper.conf. Other command line options specified together with --config and having their counterpart  in  the
           zypper config file are still preferred. + The order of preference with --config is as follows:

            1. Command line options

            2. --config file

            3. [/etc/zypp/zypp.conf] (system-wide defaults for all libzypp based applications)

                   NOTE: Use and location of the system-wide /etc/zypp/zypp.conf can not be changed this way. It’s mentioned here just because some zypper command line options allow
           to overwrite system-wide defaults defined in zypp.conf.

           +
                   See also FILES section for more information.

       -v, --verbose
           Increase verbosity. For debugging output specify this option twice.

       -q, --quiet
           Suppress normal output. Brief (esp. result notification) messages and error messages will still be printed, though. If used together with  conflicting  --verbose  option,
           the --verbose option takes preference.

       --[no-]color
           Whether to use colors in output if tty supports it. For details see the [color] section in zypper.conf.

       -A, --no-abbrev
           Do  not  abbreviate  text in tables. By default zypper will try to abbreviate texts in some columns so that the table fits the width of the screen. If you need to see the
           whole text, use this option.

       -t, --terse
           Terse output for machine consumption. Implies --no-abbrev and --no-color.

       -s, --table-style
           Specifies table style to use. Table style is identified by an integer number.

       -n, --non-interactive
           Switches to non-interactive mode. In this mode zypper doesn’t ask user to type answers to various prompts, but uses default answers automatically. Those  default  answers
           also depend on other options like --no-gpg-checks or --ignore-unknown.

       --non-interactive-include-reboot-patches
           In  non-interactive  mode  do not skip patches which have the rebootSuggested-flag set. Otherwise these patches are considered to be interactive, like patches including a
           licenses or some message to confirm. NOTE: This option does not turn on non-interactive mode.

       -x, --xmlout
           Switches to XML output. This option is useful for scripts or graphical frontends using zypper.

       -i, --ignore-unknown
           Ignore unknown packages. This option is useful for scripts, because when installing in --non-interactive mode zypper expects each command line argument to match at  least
           one known package. Unknown names or globbing expressions with no match are treated as an error unless this option is used.

       -D, --reposd-dir dir
           Use the specified directory to look for the repository definition (.repo) files. The default value is /etc/zypp/repos.d.

       -C, --cache-dir dir
           Use an alternative root directory for all caches. The default value is /var/cache/zypp.

       --raw-cache-dir dir
           Use the specified directory for storing raw copies of repository metadata files. The default value is /var/cache/zypp/raw.

       --solv-cache-dir dir
           Use the specified directory to store the repository metadata cache database files (solv files). The default value is /var/cache/zypp/solv.

       --pkg-cache-dir dir
           Use the specified directory for storing downloaded rpm packages. (see addrepo --keep-packages) The default value is /var/cache/zypp/packages.

       --userdata string
           User  data  is  expected  to  be a simple string without special chars or embedded newlines and may serve as transaction id. It will be written to all install history log
           entries created throughout this specific zypper call. It will also be passed on to zypp plugins executed during commit. This will  enable  e.g.  a  btrfs  plugin  to  tag
           created snapshots with this string. For zypper itself this string has no special meaning.

       Repository Options:

       --no-gpg-checks
           Ignore GPG check failures and continue. If a GPG issue occurs when using this option zypper prints and logs a warning and automatically continues without interrupting the
           operation. Use this option with caution, as you can easily overlook security problems by using it. (see section GPG checks) +

       --gpg-auto-import-keys
           If new repository signing key is found, do not ask what to do; trust and import it automatically. This option causes that the new key is imported also in  non-interactive
           mode, where it would otherwise got rejected.

       -p, --plus-repo URI
           Use  an  additional repository for this operation. The repository aliased tmp# and named by the specified URI will be added for this operation and removed at the end. You
           can specify this option multiple times.

       --plus-content tag
           Additionally use disabled repositories denoted by tag for this operation. If tag matches a repositories alias, name or URL, or is a keyword defined  in  the  repositories
           metadata,  the  repository will be temporarily enabled for this operation. The repository will then be refreshed and used according to the commands rules. You can specify
           this option multiple times. + If a disabled repositories metadata are not available in the local cache, they will be downloaded to scan for matching  keywords.  Otherwise
           the  keyword  scan  will  use  the  metadata  available  in  the  local  cache.  Only  if used together with the refresh command, a keyword scan will refresh all disabled
           repositories. +

           To refresh all disabled repositories metadata:
               zypper --plus-content '' ref

           To include a disabled repository repo-debug in a search:
               zypper --plus-content repo-debug search ...

           To search only in a disabled repository repo-debug:
               zypper --plus-content repo-debug search -r repo-debug ...

           To enable all repos providing the debug keyword:
               zypper in --plus-content debug  some -debuginfo or -debugsource package

       --disable-repositories
           Do not read metadata from repositories. This option will prevent loading of packages from repositories, thus making zypper work  only  with  the  installed  packages  (if
           --disable-system-resolvables was not specified).

       --no-refresh
           Do  not auto-refresh repositories (ignore the auto-refresh setting). Useful to save time when doing operations like search, if there is not a need to have a completely up
           to date metadata.

       --no-cd
           Ignore CD/DVD repositories. When this option is specified, zypper acts as if the CD/DVD repositories were not defined at all.

       --no-remote
           Ignore remote repositories like http, ftp, smb and similar. This makes using zypper easier when being offline. When this option is specified, zypper acts as if the remote
           repositories were not defined at all.

       --releasever version
           Set  the  value  of  the $releasever variable in all .repo files (default: current distribution version). This can be used to switch to new distribution repositories when
           performing a distribution upgrade. See section Repository Management and the dist-upgrade (dup) command for details. +

           To check where you already use $releasever call:
               zypper --releasever @--HERE--@ lr -u

       Target Options:

       -R, --root dir
           Operates on a different root directory. This option influences the location of the repos.d directory and the metadata cache directory and also causes rpm to be  run  with
           the --root option to do the actual installation or removal of packages. See also the FILES section.

       --installroot dir
           Behaves like --root but shares the repositories with the host system.

       --disable-system-resolvables
           This  option serves mainly for testing purposes. It will cause zypper to act as if there were no packages installed in the system. Use with caution as you can damage your
           system using this option.

SUBCOMMANDS
       Zypper subcommands are inspired by git(1). Subcommands are standalone executables that live in the zypper_execdir (/usr/lib/zypper/commands). For subcommands zypper  provides
       a  wrapper  that  knows  where  the  subcommands live, and runs them by passing command options and arguments to them. If a subcommand is not found in the zypper_execdir, the
       wrapper will look in the rest of your $PATH for it. Thus, it’s possible to write local zypper extensions that don’t live in system space.

       This is how to add your own subcommand zypper mytask:

       ·   The executable must be named zypper-’mytask'.

       ·   The executable must be located your $PATH.

       ·   A manpage for zypper-’mytask' should be provided and explaining the commands options and return values. It will be shown when calling zypper help mytask.

       ·   Zypper built-in commands take precedence over subcommands with the same name.

       ·   It’s fine to call zypper or use libzypp from within your subcommand.

       You can use the built-in zypper subcommand command to get a list of all subcommands in zypper_execdir and from elsewhere on your $PATH.

       Using zypper global-options together with subcommands, as well as executing subcommands in zypper shell is currently not supported.

FILES
       /etc/zypp/zypper.conf, $HOME/.zypper.conf
           Global (system-wide) and user’s configuration file for zypper. These files are read when zypper starts up and --config option is not used. + User’s settings are preferred
           over global settings. Similarly, command line options override the settings in either of these files. To sum it up, the order of preference is as follows (from highest to
           lowest):

            1. Command line options

            2. $HOME/.zypper.conf

            3. /etc/zypp/zypper.conf

            4. [/etc/zypp/zypp.conf] (system-wide defaults for all libzypp based applications)

                   See the comments in /etc/zypp/zypper.conf for a list and description of available options.

                   NOTE: The system-wide /etc/zypp/zypp.conf is mentioned here just because some zypper command line options allow to overwrite system-wide defaults  defined  there.
           zypp.conf and zypper.conf have different content and serve different purpose.

       /etc/zypp/zypp.conf
           ZYpp  configuration  file  affecting  all libzypp based applications. See the comments in the file for description of configurable properties. Many locations of files and
           directories listed in this section are configurable via zypp.conf. The location for this file itself can be redefined only by setting $ZYPP_CONF in the environment.

       /etc/zypp/locks
           File with package lock definitions, see locks(5) manual page for details. The package lock commands (addlock, removelock, etc.) can be used to  manipulate  this  file.  +
           This file is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /etc/zypp/repos.d
           Directory  containing  repository  definition  (*.repo) files. You can use the Repository Management commands to manipulate these files, or you can edit them yourself. In
           either case, after doing the modifications, executing *zypper refresh* is strongly recommended. + You can use  the  --reposd-dir  global  option  to  use  an  alternative
           directory for this purpose or the --root option to make this directory relative to the specified root directory. + This directory is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /etc/zypp/services.d
           Directory  containing  service definition (*.service) files. You can use the Service Management Commands to manipulate these files, or you can edit them yourself. Running
           *zypper refs* is recommended after modifications have been done. + This directory is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /usr/lib/zypper/commands
           System directory containing zypper extensions (see section SUBCOMMANDS)

       /var/cache/zypp/raw
           Directory for storing raw metadata contained in repositories. Use the --raw-cache-dir global option to use an alternative directory for this purpose or the --root  option
           to make this directory relative to the specified root directory. + This directory is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /var/cache/zypp/solv
           Directory containing preparsed metadata in form of solv files. + This directory is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /var/cache/zypp/packages
           If  keeppackages  property  is  set  for  a repository (see the modifyrepo command), all the RPM file downloaded during installation will be kept here. See also the clean
           command for cleaning these cache directories. + This directory is used by all ZYpp-based applications.

       /var/log/zypp/history
           Installation history log.

       ~/.zypper_history
           Command history for the zypper shell (see the shell command).

       /etc/zypp/needreboot
           File with a list of packages that will set the reboot-needed flag when installed or upgraded.

       /etc/zypp/needreboot.d
           Directory that can be used to define packages that trigger the reboot-needed flag by adding additional files containing the required package names.

EXIT CODES
       There are several exit codes defined for zypper built-in commands for use e.g. within scripts. These codes are defined in header file src/zypper-main.h found in zypper source
       package.  Codes  below  100  denote  an  error,  codes above 100 provide a specific information, 0 represents a normal successful run. Following is a list of these codes with
       descriptions:

       0 - ZYPPER_EXIT_OK
           Successful run of zypper with no special info.

       1 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_BUG
           Unexpected situation occurred, probably caused by a bug.

       2 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_SYNTAX
           zypper was invoked with an invalid command or option, or a bad syntax.

       3 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_INVALID_ARGS
           Some of provided arguments were invalid. E.g. an invalid URI was provided to the addrepo command.

       4 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_ZYPP
           A problem is reported by ZYPP library.

       5 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_PRIVILEGES
           User invoking zypper has insufficient privileges for specified operation.

       6 - ZYPPER_EXIT_NO_REPOS
           No repositories are defined.

       7 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ZYPP_LOCKED
           The ZYPP library is locked, e.g. packagekit is running.

       8 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ERR_COMMIT
           An error occurred during installation or removal of packages. You may run zypper verify to repair any dependency problems.

       100 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_UPDATE_NEEDED
           Returned by the patch-check command if there are patches available for installation.

       101 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_SEC_UPDATE_NEEDED
           Returned by the patch-check command if there are security patches available for installation.

       102 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_REBOOT_NEEDED
           Returned after a successful installation of a patch which requires reboot of computer.

       103 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_RESTART_NEEDED
           Returned after a successful installation of a patch which requires restart of the package manager itself. This means that one of  patches  to  be  installed  affects  the
           package manager itself and the command used (e.g. zypper update) needs to be executed once again to install any remaining patches.

       104 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_CAP_NOT_FOUND
           Returned by the install and the remove command in case any of the arguments does not match any of the available (or installed) package names or other capabilities.

       105 - ZYPPER_EXIT_ON_SIGNAL
           Returned upon exiting after receiving a SIGINT or SIGTERM.

       106 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_REPOS_SKIPPED
           Some repository had to be disabled temporarily because it failed to refresh. You should check your repository configuration (e.g. zypper ref -f).

       107 - ZYPPER_EXIT_INF_RPM_SCRIPT_FAILED
           Installation  basically  succeeded, but some of the packages %post install scripts returned an error. These packages were successfully unpacked to disk and are registered
           in the rpm database, but due to the failed install script they may not work as expected. The failed scripts output might reveal what  actually  went  wrong.  Any  scripts
           output is also logged to /var/log/zypp/history.

       Zypper subcommands (see section SUBCOMMANDS) may return different codes which should be described in the commands man page. Call zypper help subcommand to see the subcommands
       man page if one is provided.

HOMEPAGE
       <https://github.com/openSUSE/zypper>

AUTHORS
       The zypper project was started by Martin Vidner, Jan Kupec, Michael Andres, Duncan  Mac-Vicar  Prett,  Josef  Reidinger  and  Stanislav  Visnovsky.  Many  people  have  later
       contributed to it.

SEE ALSO
       locks(5), zypper-log(8), YaST2(8)

SUSE Linux                                                                            2019-03-21                                                                            ZYPPER(8)

 


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