A tool for managing official Slackware packages, designed for unRAID.
Compatible with unRAID >5.0
With curl
curl -skL http://git.io/8GviJQ | sh
With wget
wget -qO- --no-check-certificate http://git.io/8GviJQ | sh -
You may need to reopen your terminal session after installing.
Without trolley: search the web for a package, download it, get it on your unRAID box, install it, and remember to put it in /boot/extra for next time.
With trolley, you can do all that in one go: trolley install openssl
.
The common process is to remove it from /boot/extra then run removepkg. You might even have to restart.
With trolley, it's just trolley remove openssl
. No restart required.
Without trolley: remove from /boot/extra then run removepkg. Maybe restart. Then, search the web for a new version, download it, get it on your unRAID box, install it, and remember to put it in /boot/extra for next time. Woof.
With trolley, it's just trolley update openssl
.
If you need a 64-bit package, go through the tedious install process, but be sure to get the x86_64 version and not the i*86 version. Oops, got the wrong one? Do over.
Trolley matches your arch automatically: trolley install openssl
.
If you're building a package with boiler, trolley is included automatically. If you're doing your own thing, add this to your code:
[[ `command -v trolley` == "" ]] && wget -qO- --no-check-certificate http://git.io/8GviJQ | sh -
And specify versions (bash assumed):
trolley install openssl "~> 1.0.1"
trolley install glibc "> 2.15"
...
root@Tower:~# trolley
Commands:
trolley help [COMMAND] # Describe available commands or one specific command
trolley info NAME [VERSION] # Show package details
trolley install NAME [VERSION] # Install a new package
trolley list [NAME] # List installed packages
trolley remove NAME # Remove a package
trolley search [NAME] # Searches for matching packages
trolley version # Show Trolley version
Tips
- If you do not want a package to be installed on reboot, remove it from
/boot/extra
. - Trolley is optimistic about versions. It will always pick the newest, best match.
- If you do not specify a package version on install, the newest available package will be used.
Partial matches are supported.
root@Tower:~# trolley search open
openexr openldap-client openobex openssh
openssl openssl-solibs openvpn xf86-video-openchrome
open-cobol
List everything
root@Tower:~# trolley list
aaa_base 14.1
aaa_elflibs 14.1
acl 2.2.51
acpid 2.0.19
apmd 3.2.2
at 3.1.12
...
Filter the list with packages containing "tr"
root@Tower:~# trolley list tr
attr 2.4.46
tree 1.6.0
trolley 0.2.0_pre3
root@Tower:~# trolley info openssl
Name openssl
Summary openssl (Secure Sockets Layer toolkit)
Versions 0.9.8n, 0.9.8r, 0.9.8y, 1.0.1c, 1.0.1e, 1.0.1f
Get info on a specific version
root@Tower:~# trolley info openssl 1.0.1e
Name openssl
Summary openssl (Secure Sockets Layer toolkit)
Version 1.0.1e
Arch x86_64
Build 1
Size 12974080 (2912256 compressed)
Slackware 14.1
Patch no
root@Tower:~# trolley install openssl
=> Downloading openssl (1.0.1f)
=> Installing
=> Installed
The following version constraints are supported:
-
- <
- =
-
=
- <=
- ~>
Trolley is optimistic when picking versions. It will always pick the newest available except when a package version isn't specified (trolley install openssl
).
In this case, the most optimistic version available for your Slackware version will be used.
Example: if you're on Slackware 13.1 and you do trolley install openssl
, 0.9.8y will be used.
You can override this behavior by specifying a version, or a constraint (eg, ">0").
32 and 64-bit architectures are automatically supported. Package matching rules apply in addition to matching the host OS arch.
Trolley can install official packages by name. It also supports installing via url, if the package is a 3rd party Slackware package (the name will formatted NAME-VERSION-ARCH-BUILD.t*z).
MIT. See LICENSE.txt for details.