To install:
To use the latest code, you can also clone this repository and
run:
To see available options:
Run with one or more software version files:
nvchecker -c config_file.toml
A simple config file may look like:
[nvchecker]
source = "github"
github = "lilydjwg/nvchecker"
[python-toml]
source = "pypi"
pypi = "toml"
You normally will like to specify some "version record
files"; see below.
With --logger=json or --logger=both, you can get a
structured logging for programmatically consuming. You can use
--json-log-fd=FD to specify the file descriptor to send logs to (take
care to do line buffering). The logging level option (-l or
--logging) doesn't take effect with this.
The JSON log is one JSON string per line. The following documented
events and fields are stable, undocumented ones may change without
notice.
- event=updated
- An update is detected. Fields name, old_version and
version are available. old_version maybe null.
- event=up-to-date
- There is no update. Fields name and version are
available.
- event=no-result
- No version is detected. There may be an error. Fields name is
available.
- level=error
- There is an error. Fields name and exc_info may be available
to give further information.
There are several backward-incompatible changes from the previous
1.x version.
- 1.
- Version 2.x requires Python 3.7+ to run.
- 2.
- The command syntax changes a bit. You need to use a -c switch to
specify your software version configuration file (or use the
default).
- 3.
- The configuration file format has been changed from ini to toml.
You can use the nvchecker-ini2toml script to convert your old
configuration files. However, comments and formatting will be lost, and
some options may not be converted correctly.
- 4.
- Several options have been renamed. max_concurrent to
max_concurrency, and all option names have their - be
replaced with _.
- 5.
- All software configuration tables need a source option to specify
which source is to be used rather than being figured out from option names
in use. This enables additional source plugins to be discovered.
- 6.
- The version record files have been changed to use JSON format (the old
format will be converted on writing).
- 7.
- The vcs source is removed. (It's available inside lilac at
the moment.) A git source is provided.
- 8.
- include_tags_pattern and ignored_tags are removed. Use
List Options instead.
The software version source files are in toml format. The
key name is the name of the software. Following fields are used to
tell nvchecker how to determine the current version of that software.
See sample_source.toml for an example.
A special table named __config__ provides some
configuration options.
Relative path are relative to the source files, and ~ and
environmental variables are expanded.
Currently supported options are:
- oldver
- Specify a version record file containing the old version info.
- newver
- Specify a version record file to store the new version info.
- proxy
- The HTTP proxy to use. The format is proto://host:port, e.g.
http://localhost:8087. Different backends have different level
support for this, e.g. with pycurl you can use
socks5h://host:port proxies.
- max_concurrency
- Max number of concurrent jobs. Default: 20.
- http_timeout
- Time in seconds to wait for HTTP requests. Default: 20.
- keyfile
- Specify a toml config file containing key (token) information. This file
should contain a keys table, mapping key names to key values. See
specific source for the key name(s) to use.
Sample keyfile.toml:
[keys]
# https://github.com/settings/tokens
# scope: repo -> public_repo
github = "ghp_<stripped>"
The following options apply to every check sources. You can use
them in any item in your configuration file.
- prefix
- Strip the prefix string if the version string starts with it. Otherwise
the version string is returned as-is.
- from_pattern,
to_pattern
- Both are Python-compatible regular expressions. If from_pattern is
found in the version string, it will be replaced with to_pattern.
If from_pattern is not found, the version string
remains unchanged and no error is emitted.
- missing_ok
- Suppress warnings and errors if a version checking module finds nothing.
Currently only regex supports it.
- proxy
- The HTTP proxy to use. The format is proto://host:port, e.g.
http://localhost:8087. Different backends have different level
support for this, e.g. with pycurl you can use
socks5h://host:port proxies.
Set it to "" (empty string) to override the
global setting.
This only works when the source implementation uses the
builtin HTTP client, and doesn't work with the aur source because
it's batched (however the global proxy config still applies).
- user_agent
- The user agent string to use for HTTP requests.
- tries
- Try specified times when a network error occurs. Default is 1.
This only works when the source implementation uses the
builtin HTTP client.
- httptoken
- A personal authorization token used to fetch the url with the
Authorization header. The type of token depends on the
authorization required.
- For Bearer token set : Bearer <Your_bearer_token>
- For Basic token set : Basic <Your_base64_encoded_token>
In the keyfile add httptoken_{name} token.
- verify_cert
- Whether to verify the HTTPS certificate or not. Default is
true.
If both prefix and from_pattern/to_pattern
are used, from_pattern/to_pattern are ignored. If you want to
strip the prefix and then do something special, just use
from_pattern/to_pattern. For example, the transformation of
v1_1_0 => 1.1.0 can be achieved with from_pattern =
'v(\d+)_(\d+)_(\d+)' and to_pattern = '\1.\2.\3'. (Note that in
TOML it's easiler to write regexes in single quotes so you don't need to
escape \.)
The following options apply to sources that return a list. See
individual source tables to determine whether they are supported.
- include_regex
- Only consider version strings that match the given regex. The whole string
should match the regex. Be sure to use .* when you mean it!
- exclude_regex
- Don't consider version strings that match the given regex. The whole
string should match the regex. Be sure to use .* when you mean it!
This option has higher precedence that include_regex; that is, if
matched by this one, it's excluded even it's also matched by
include_regex.
- sort_version_key
- Sort the version string using this key function. Choose among
parse_version, vercmp and awesomeversion. Default
value is parse_version. parse_version uses an old version of
pkg_resources.parse_version. vercmp uses
pyalpm.vercmp. awesomeversion uses
awesomeversion.
- ignored
- Version strings that are explicitly ignored, separated by whitespace. This
can be useful to avoid some known mis-named versions, so newer ones won't
be "overridden" by the old broken ones.
Search through a specific webpage for the version string. This
type of version finding has these fields:
- url
- The URL of the webpage to fetch.
- encoding
- (Optional) The character encoding of the webpage, if latin1
is not appropriate.
- regex
- A regular expression used to find the version string.
It can have zero or one capture group. The capture group or
the whole match is the version string.
When multiple version strings are found, the maximum of those
is chosen.
- post_data
- (Optional) When present, a POST request (instead of a
GET) will be used. The value should be a string containing the full
body of the request. The encoding of the string can be specified using the
post_data_type option.
- post_data_type
- (Optional) Specifies the Content-Type of the request body
(post_data). By default, this is
application/x-www-form-urlencoded.
This source supports List Options.
Send an HTTP request and search through a specific header.
- url
- The URL of the HTTP request.
- (Optional) The header to look at. Default is Location.
Another useful header is Content-Disposition.
- regex
- A regular expression used to find the version string.
It can have zero or one capture group. The capture group or
the whole match is the version string.
When multiple version strings are found, the maximum of those
is chosen.
- method
- (Optional) The HTTP method to use. Default is HEAD.
- follow_redirects
- (Optional) Whether to follow 3xx HTTP redirects. Default is
false. If you are looking at a Location header, you
shouldn't change this.
Send an HTTP request and search through the body a specific
xpath.
- url
- The URL of the HTTP request.
- xpath
- An xpath expression used to find the version string.
- post_data
- (Optional) When present, a POST request (instead of a
GET) will be used. The value should be a string containing the full
body of the request. The encoding of the string can be specified using the
post_data_type option.
- post_data_type
- (Optional) Specifies the Content-Type of the request body
(post_data). By default, this is
application/x-www-form-urlencoded.
NOTE:
An additional dependency "lxml" is required.
You can use pip install 'nvchecker[htmlparser]'.
Use a shell command line to get the version. The output is striped
first, so trailing newlines do not bother.
- cmd
- The command line to use. This will run with the system's standard shell
(i.e. /bin/sh).
Check Arch User Repository for updates. Per-item proxy
setting doesn't work for this because several items will be batched into one
request.
- aur
- The package name in AUR. If empty, use the name of software (the table
name).
- strip_release
- Strip the release part.
- use_last_modified
- Append last modified time to the version.
Check GitHub for updates. The version returned is in date
format %Y%m%d.%H%M%S, e.g. 20130701.012212, unless
use_latest_release or use_max_tag is used. See below.
- github
- The github repository, with author, e.g. lilydjwg/nvchecker.
- branch
- Which branch to track? Default: the repository's default.
- path
- Only commits containing this file path will be returned.
- use_latest_release
- Set this to true to check for the latest release on GitHub.
GitHub releases are not the same with git tags. You'll see big
version names and descriptions in the release page for such releases,
e.g. zfsonlinux/zfs's, and those small ones like
nvchecker's are only git tags that should use use_max_tag
below.
Will return the release name instead of date.
- use_latest_tag
- Set this to true to check for the latest tag on GitHub.
This requires a token because it's using the v4 GraphQL
API.
- query
- When use_latest_tag is true, this sets a query for the tag.
The exact matching method is not documented by GitHub.
- use_max_tag
- Set this to true to check for the max tag on GitHub. Unlike
use_latest_release, this option includes both annotated tags and
lightweight ones, and return the largest one sorted by the
sort_version_key option. Will return the tag name instead of
date.
- token
- A personal authorization token used to call the API.
An authorization token may be needed in order to use
use_latest_tag or to request more frequently than anonymously.
To set an authorization token, you can set:
- a key named github in the keyfile
- the token option
This source supports List Options when use_max_tag
is set.
Check Gitea for updates. The version returned is in date
format %Y%m%d, e.g. 20130701, unless use_max_tag is
used. See below.
- gitea
- The gitea repository, with author, e.g. gitea/tea.
- branch
- Which branch to track? Default: the repository's default.
- use_max_tag
- Set this to true to check for the max tag on Gitea. Will return the
biggest one sorted by old pkg_resources.parse_version. Will return
the tag name instead of date.
- host
- Hostname for self-hosted Gitea instance.
- token
- Gitea authorization token used to call the API.
To set an authorization token, you can set:
- a key named gitea_{host} in the keyfile, where host is
all-lowercased host name
- the token option
This source supports List Options when use_max_tag
is set.
Check BitBucket for updates. The version returned is in
date format %Y%m%d, e.g. 20130701, unless use_max_tag
is used. See below.
- bitbucket
- The bitbucket repository, with author, e.g. lilydjwg/dotvim.
- branch
- Which branch to track? Default: the repository's default.
- use_max_tag
- Set this to true to check for the max tag on BitBucket. Will return
the biggest one sorted by old pkg_resources.parse_version. Will
return the tag name instead of date.
- use_sorted_tags
- If true, tags are queried and sorted according to the query
and sort keys. Will return the tag name instead of the date.
- query
- A query string use to filter tags when use_sorted_tags set (see
here for examples). The string does not need to be escaped.
- sort
- A field used to sort the tags when use_sorted_tags is set (see
here for examples). Defaults to -target.date (sorts tags in
descending order by date).
- max_page
- How many pages do we search for the max tag? Default is 3. This works when
use_max_tag is set.
This source supports List Options when use_max_tag
or use_sorted_tags is set.
Check GitLab for updates. The version returned is in date
format %Y%m%d, e.g. 20130701, unless use_max_tag is
used. See below.
- gitlab
- The gitlab repository, with author, e.g. Deepin/deepin-music.
- branch
- Which branch to track?
- use_max_tag
- Set this to true to check for the max tag on GitLab. Will return
the biggest one sorted by old pkg_resources.parse_version. Will
return the tag name instead of date.
- host
- Hostname for self-hosted GitLab instance.
- token
- GitLab authorization token used to call the API.
To set an authorization token, you can set:
- a key named gitlab_{host} in the keyfile, where host is
all-lowercased host name
- the token option
This source supports List Options when use_max_tag
is set.
Check PyPI for updates.
- pypi
- The name used on PyPI, e.g. PySide.
- use_pre_release
- Whether to accept pre release. Default is false.
NOTE:
An additional dependency "packaging" is
required. You can use pip install 'nvchecker[pypi]'.
Check RubyGems for updates.
- gems
- The name used on RubyGems, e.g. sass.
This source supports List Options.
Check NPM Registry for updates.
- npm
- The name used on NPM Registry, e.g. coffee-script.
To configure which registry to query, a source plugin option is
available. You can specify like this:
[__config__.source.npm]
registry = "https://registry.npm.taobao.org"
Check Hackage for updates.
- hackage
- The name used on Hackage, e.g. pandoc.
Check MetaCPAN for updates.
- cpan
- The name used on CPAN, e.g. YAML.
Check CRAN for updates.
- cran
- The name used on CRAN, e.g. xml2.
Check Packagist for updates.
- packagist
- The name used on Packagist, e.g. monolog/monolog.
Check crates.io for updates.
- cratesio
- The crate name on crates.io, e.g. tokio.
This is used when you run nvchecker on an Arch Linux system
and the program always keeps up with a package in your configured
repositories for Pacman.
This enables you to track the update of Arch Linux official
packages, without needing of pacman and an updated local Pacman
databases.
- archpkg
- Name of the Arch Linux package.
- strip_release
- Strip the release part, only return part before -.
- provided
- Instead of the package version, return the version this package provides.
Its value is what the package provides, and strip_release takes
effect too. This is best used with libraries.
This enables you to track the update of Debian Linux official
packages, without needing of apt and an updated local APT database.
- debianpkg
- Name of the Debian Linux source package.
- suite
- Name of the Debian release (jessie, wheezy, etc, defaults to sid)
- strip_release
- Strip the release part.
This enables you to track the update of Ubuntu Linux official
packages, without needing of apt and an updated local APT database.
- ubuntupkg
- Name of the Ubuntu Linux source package.
- suite
- Name of the Ubuntu release (xenial, zesty, etc, defaults to None, which
means no limit on suite)
- strip_release
- Strip the release part.
This enables you to track updates from Repology
(repology.org).
- repology
- Name of the project to check.
- repo
- Check the version in this repo. This field is required.
- subrepo
- Check the version in this subrepo. This field is optional. When omitted
all subrepos are queried.
This source supports List Options.
This enables you to track updates from Anitya
(release-monitoring.org).
- anitya
- distro/package, where distro can be a lot of things like
"fedora", "arch linux", "gentoo", etc.
package is the package name of the chosen distribution.
This enables you to track updates of Android SDK packages listed
in sdkmanager --list.
- android_sdk
- The package path prefix. This value is matched against the path
attribute in all <remotePackage> nodes in an SDK manifest XML. The
first match is used for version comparisons.
- repo
- Should be one of addon or package. Packages in
addon2-1.xml use addon and packages in
repository2-1.xml use package.
- channel
- Choose the target channel from one of stable, beta,
dev or canary. This option also accepts a comma-separated
list to pick from multiple channels. For example, the latest unstable
version is picked with beta,dev,canary. The default is
stable.
- host_os
- Choose the target OS for the tracked package from one of linux,
macosx, windows. The default is linux. For
OS-independent packages (e.g., Java JARs), this field is ignored.
This source supports List Options.
This enables you to track updates of macOS applications which
using Sparkle framework.
- sparkle
- The url of the sparkle appcast.
This enables you to check updates from Pagure.
- pagure
- The project name, optionally with a namespace.
- host
- Hostname of alternative instance like src.fedoraproject.org.
This source returns tags and supports List Options.
This enables you to track the update of an arbitrary APT
repository, without needing of apt and an updated local APT database.
- pkg
- Name of the APT binary package.
- srcpkg
- Name of the APT source package.
- mirror
- URL of the repository.
- suite
- Name of the APT repository release (jessie, wheezy, etc)
- repo
- Name of the APT repository (main, contrib, etc, defaults to main)
- arch
- Architecture of the repository (i386, amd64, etc, defaults to amd64)
- strip_release
- Strip the release part.
Note that either pkg or srcpkg needs to be specified (but not
both) or the item name will be used as pkg.
This enables you to check tags or branch commits of an arbitrary
git repository, also useful for scenarios like a github project having too
many tags.
- git
- URL of the Git repository.
- use_commit
- Return a commit hash instead of tags.
- branch
- When use_commit is true, return the commit on the specified branch
instead of the default one.
When this source returns tags (use_commit is not true) it
supports List Options.
This enables you to check tags of images on a container registry
like Docker.
- container
- The path for the container image. For official Docker images, use
namespace library/ (e.g. library/python).
- registry
- The container registry host. Default: docker.io
registry and container are the host and the path
used in the pull command. Note that the docker command allows
omitting some parts of the container name while this plugin requires the
full name. If the host part is omitted, use docker.io, and if there
is no slash in the path, prepend library/ to the path. Here are some
examples:
Pull command |
registry |
container |
docker pull
quay.io/prometheus/node-exporter |
quay.io |
prometheus/node-exporter |
docker pull nvidia/cuda |
docker.io |
nvidia/cuda |
docker pull python |
docker.io |
library/python |
This source returns tags and supports List Options.
Check package updates in a local ALPM database.
- alpm
- Name of the package.
- repo
- Name of the package repository in which the package resides. If not
provided, nvchecker will use repos value, see below.
- repos
- An array of possible repositories in which the package may reside in,
nvchecker will use the first repository which contains the package. If not
provided, core, extra, community and multilib
will be used, in that order.
- dbpath
- Path to the ALPM database directory. Default: /var/lib/pacman. You
need to update the database yourself.
- strip_release
- Strip the release part, only return the part before -.
- provided
- Instead of the package version, return the version this package provides.
Its value is what the package provides, and strip_release takes
effect too. This is best used with libraries.
NOTE:
An additional dependency "pyalpm" is
required.
Search package files in a local ALPM files database. The package
does not need to be installed. This can be useful for checking shared
library versions if a package does not list them in its provides.
- pkgname
- Name of the package.
- filename
- Regular expression for the file path. If it contains one matching group,
that group is returned. Otherwise return the whole file path. Paths do not
have an initial slash. For example, usr/lib/libuv\\.so\\.([^.]+)
matches the major shared library version of libuv.
- repo
- Name of the package repository in which the package resides. If not
provided, search all repositories.
- strip_dir
- Strip directory from the path before matching. Defaults to
false.
- dbpath
- Path to the ALPM database directory. Default: /var/lib/pacman. You
need to update the database yourself with pacman -Fy.
Check Open Vsx for updates.
- openvsx
- The extension's Unique Identifier on open-vsx.org, e.g.
ritwickdey.LiveServer.
Check Visual Studio Code Marketplace for updates.
- vsmarketplace
- The extension's Unique Identifier on marketplace.visualstudio.com/vscode,
e.g. ritwickdey.LiveServer.
This source can combine results from other entries.
- from
- A list of entry names to wait results for.
- format
- A format string to combine the results into the final string.
Example:
[entry-1]
source = "cmd"
cmd = "echo 1"
[entry-2]
source = "cmd"
cmd = "echo 2"
[entry-3]
source = "combiner"
from = ["entry-1", "entry-2"]
format = "$1-$2"
This enables you to manually specify the version (maybe because
you want to approve each release before it gets to the script).
It's possible to extend the supported sources by writing plugins.
See plugin for documentation.