Awesome
autoupdate-zsh-plugin
oh-my-zsh plugin for auto updating of git-repositories in $ZSH_CUSTOM folder
Install
Create a new directory in $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins
called autoupdate
and clone this repo into that directory. Note: it must be named autoupdate
or oh-my-zsh won't recognize that it is a valid plugin directory.
git clone https://github.com/TamCore/autoupdate-oh-my-zsh-plugins $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins/autoupdate
Usage
Add autoupdate
to the plugins=()
list in your ~/.zshrc
file and you're done.
plugins=(autoupdate)
# Multiple plugins should be separated by space character
# plugins=(somePlugin autoupdate)
By default this will auto update both plugins and themes, found in the $ZSH_CUSTOM folder, every 13 days (which is the OhMyZsh default).
If you want to check for updates more or less often, you can export the UPDATE_ZSH_DAYS
variable in your ~/.zshrc
file:
# to check for updates once a month
export UPDATE_ZSH_DAYS=30
# or to check for updates daily
export UPDATE_ZSH_DAYS=1
Another possibility is to use the provided upgrade function, which one may call
at any time using upgrade_oh_my_zsh_custom
. There shouldn't be any difference
with the automatic operation. Also, a convenient alias that calls the OhMyZsh
update function omz update
and then upgrade_oh_my_zsh_custom
, called
upgrade_oh_my_zsh_all
, is available as well. However, running omz update
directly will not trigger the this plugin.
Quiet mode
To turn off the "Upgrading custom plugins" message (for example, if you're using Powerlevel10k's instant prompt), add this to your ~/.zshrc
file:
# Uncomment the following line to change how often to auto-update (in days).
# export UPDATE_ZSH_DAYS=13
ZSH_CUSTOM_AUTOUPDATE_QUIET=true
Parallel downloads
To speed up updates by setting maximum number of parallel downloads, add this to your ~/.zshrc
file:
# Values accepted (min: 1, max: 16)
# Parallel downloads will not be enabled if value is out-of-range
ZSH_CUSTOM_AUTOUPDATE_NUM_WORKERS=8