Include:Upgrading to latest release
When Alpine Linux is installed to hard drive, upgrading to a newer stable version is straightforward.
To begin, you need to update your /etc/apk/repositories file. Here are some shortcuts for doing so:
- Launch
setup-apkrepos
Enter e to edit /etc/apk/repositories. Change the version number by hand. - Or, edit the file in place. This is how you'd change v2.4 to v2.5:
sed -i -e 's/v2\.4/v2.5/g' /etc/apk/repositories
- Launch
Or you could do this manually: When Alpine Linux is installed to hard drive, upgrading to a newer stable version is straightforward.
To begin, you need to update your /etc/apk/repositories file. Here are some shortcuts for doing so:
- Launch
setup-apkrepos
Enter e to edit /etc/apk/repositories. Change the version number by hand. - Or, edit the file in place. This is how you'd change v2.4 to v2.5:
sed -i -e 's/v2\.4/v2.5/g' /etc/apk/repositories
- Launch
Or you could do this manually: Template loop detected: Include:Using Internet Repositories for apk-tools
If you're upgrading from a version of Alpine before 2.3.0_rc1, ensure you have the latest available version of the Alpine Linux Package Manager first before upgrading anything else:
apk add --upgrade apk-tools
Next, upgrade all your packages:
apk upgrade --available
The --available switch is used to force all packages to be upgraded, even if they have the same version numbers. Sometimes changes in uClibc require doing this.
sync reboot
If you're upgrading from a version of Alpine before 2.3.0_rc1, ensure you have the latest available version of the Alpine Linux Package Manager first before upgrading anything else:
apk add --upgrade apk-tools
Next, upgrade all your packages:
apk upgrade --available
The --available switch is used to force all packages to be upgraded, even if they have the same version numbers. Sometimes changes in uClibc require doing this.
sync reboot