mirror of
https://git.proxmox.com/git/fwupd
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| .. | ||
| activate-shutdown | ||
| fix-bash-completion | ||
| fwup-efi-signed | ||
| libefivar-fixpkgconfig | ||
| update-mime | ||
| dbxtool.wrapper | ||
| dfu-tool.wrapper | ||
| fwupd-command | ||
| fwupd.wrapper | ||
| fwupdagent.wrapper | ||
| fwupdmgr.wrapper | ||
| fwupdtool.wrapper | ||
| fwupdtpmevlog.wrapper | ||
| README.md | ||
Snap support
Snaps are containerised software packages that are simple to create and install. They auto-update and are safe to run. And because they bundle their dependencies, they work on all major Linux systems without modification.
stable vs unstable
Two yaml files are distributed:
-
snapcraft.yaml This uses tarball releases for all dependencies and what is currently in tree for fwupd.
-
snapcraft-master.yaml This uses git for most dependencies and may be considered unstable.
Building
Builds can be performed using snapcraft:
# snapcraft cleanbuild
Installing
A "classic" snap is produced, and locally built snaps can be installed like this:
# snap install fwupd_daily_amd64.snap --dangerous --classic
The --dangerous flag is because snaps built locally are not signed.
Snaps distributed by a store will not need this flag.