fedora-repoquery
A dnf wrapper to repoquery different Fedora releases,
caching repodata separately per release.
It also supports EPEL and Centos Stream repos.
Usage
Usage examples:
$ fedora-repoquery rawhide firefox
firefox-130.0-1.fc42.x86_64 (fedora-rawhide)
$ fedora-repoquery 40 --requires filesystem
setup
$ fedora-repoquery epel9 ghc
ghc-8.10.7-116.el9.x86_64 (epel9)
$ fedora-repoquery c10 bash
bash-5.2.26-4.el10.x86_64 (c10s-BaseOS)
$ fedora-repoquery eln kernel
kernel-6.11.0-0.rc6.20240906gitb831f83e40a2.53.eln142.x86_64 (eln-BaseOS)
Without a release argument, the system yum repo configuration is used:
$ fedora-repoquery pandoc
pandoc-3.1.11.1-32.fc41.x86_64 (rawhide)
but then currently you have to insert --
before a query option:
$ fedora-repoquery -- --whatrequires pandoc
R-reprex-2.0.2-12.fc41.noarch (rawhide)
R-rmarkdown-2.24-5.fc41.noarch (rawhide)
pandoc-pdf-3.1.11.1-32.fc41.x86_64 (rawhide)
python3-nb2plots-0.7.2-5.fc41.noarch (rawhide)
python3-pypandoc-1.13-6.fc41.noarch (rawhide)
rstudio-common-2024.04.2+764-3.fc41.x86_64 (rawhide)
Use the --time (-T) option to display repo timestamps:
$ fedora-repoquery -T 41 fedrq
2024-07-16 19:45:44 +08 <https://mirror.freedif.org/fedora/fedora/linux/development/rawhide>
fedrq-1.1.0-3.fc41.noarch (fedora-rawhide)
Repo timestamp(s) are output when there are no query args
after the release version:
$ fedora-repoquery 40
2024-04-20 02:22:34 +08 <https://mirror.freedif.org/fedora/fedora/linux/releases/40/>
2024-09-07 09:37:56 +08 <https://mirror.freedif.org/fedora/fedora/linux/updates/40/>
One can also query multiple releases (or arch's):
$ fedora-repoquery 40 41 python3 | grep x86_64
python3-3.12.2-2.fc40.x86_64 (f40)
python3-3.12.5-2.fc40.x86_64 (f40-updates)
python3-3.13.0~rc1-2.fc41.x86_64 (f41-development)
python3-3.13.0~rc1-3.fc41.x86_64 (f41-updates-testing)
Help
$ fedora-repoquery --version
0.7.1
$ fedora-repoquery --help
fedora-repoquery tool for querying Fedora repos for packages.
Usage: fedora-repoquery [--version] [-4|--dnf4] [(-q|--quiet) | (-v|--verbose)]
[--dynamic] [-T|--time] [-K|--koji]
[--devel-channel | --test-channel]
[(-m|--mirror URL) | (-D|--dl)]
[(-s|--source) | (-A|--all-archs) | [-a|--arch ARCH]]
[-t|--testing] [-d|--debug]
((-z|--cache-size) | (-e|--cache-clean-empty) |
(-l|--list) |
[RELEASE|--]... [REPOQUERY_OPTS]... [PACKAGE]...)
where RELEASE is {fN or N (fedora), 'rawhide', epelN, epelN-next, cN (centos
stream), 'eln'}, with N the release version number.
https://github.com/juhp/fedora-repoquery#readme
Available options:
-h,--help Show this help text
--version Show version
-4,--dnf4 Use dnf4 instead of dnf5 (if available)
-q,--quiet Avoid output to stderr
-v,--verbose Show stderr from dnf repoquery
--dynamic Redirect each HTTP through mirror
-T,--time Show time-stamp of repos
-K,--koji Use Koji buildroot
--devel-channel Use eln development compose
--test-channel Use eln test compose [default: production]
-m,--mirror URL Fedora mirror [default:
https://download.fedoraproject.org/pub]
-D,--dl Use dl.fp.o
-s,--source Query source repos
-A,--all-archs Query all (64 bit) arch repos
-a,--arch ARCH Specify arch [default: x86_64]
-t,--testing Fedora updates-testing
-d,--debug Show some debug output
-z,--cache-size Show total dnf repo metadata cache disksize
-e,--cache-clean-empty Remove empty dnf caches
-l,--list List Fedora versions
The default arch is the system arch.
Installation
fedora-repoquery is available in Fedora and EPEL 9:
https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/fedora-repoquery.
Building from source
Use stack install fedora-repoquery
or cabal install fedora-repoquery
to build the latest release.
To build from git: stack install
or cabal install
or cabal-rpm install
.
Contributing
fedora-repoquery is distributed under the GPL license version 3 or later.
https://github.com/juhp/fedora-repoquery