I want to create a script to force update brew applications that are outdated.
I tried something like that, but it's not working:
var=$(brew cask outdated); for f in $var; do "brew upgrade $var --force"; done
I am a beginner in bash, I think what I'm searching is easy, but i need help.
Running brew update
is not needed any more since Homebrew version 3 or so. When it needs fresh information about packages, Homebrew runs brew update --auto-update
and caches the information for about 10 minutes.
The commands to run now are:
brew outdated
brew upgrade
brew cleanup
Read below about the meaning and usage of brew outdated
and brew upgrade
.
brew outdated
is not really needed but it helps you to have an overview of what needs to be upgraded, before doing the actual upgrade. You can decide to not update all formulae and casks blindly (by running brew upgrade
without arguments) but to upgrade only some packages (by adding the package name(s) in the command line).
You may also decide to pin some formulae to their current versions using brew pin <formula>
; brew upgrade
ignores the pinned formulae.
A command to pin the casks is not provided because it is not possible to pin a cask to a certain version. As Homebrew FAQ explains, when a software program uses built-in mechanisms to upgrade itself, pinning the cask to a certain version can lead to inconsistency between the version reported by Homebrew (the one that it tries to pin the cask to) and the actual version of the software, updated by its built-in mechanism. For such software programs, the pin does not actually work, but only produces confusion.
The last command (brew cleanup
) removes the old versions of the installed packages from its local cache. Homebrew keeps in a cache the package used to install the current version of a formula or cask.
This command is also not really needed any more, Homebrew cleans the old source packages after it upgrades a formula or a cask. However, brew cleanup
is still helpful because it removes (many and small) other files that are not needed any more (logs, caches, etc.)
During 2020 the sub-commands of the cask
command were gradually integrated into the core of Homebrew and were deprecated. The core commands now operate on both formulae and casks. To limit their scope to only formulae or casks add the --formula
or --cask
option to the command line.
The cask
command has been completely removed from Homebrew in version 2.6.0
, released in December 2020.
There is a unified flow now for both formulae and casks:
brew update
brew outdated
brew upgrade
The first command (brew update
) gets from the Homebrew servers the information about the most recent versions of the available formulae and casks.
The second command (brew outdated
) lists the outdated installed formulae and casks. Add --formulae
or --casks
to the command line to limit the command scope to formulae or casks. Add --greedy
to the command line to include in its output the casks that are marked as "auto-updateable".
This command is not needed. It can be used to see what programs will be upgraded before doing the actual upgrade.
The third command (brew upgrade
) upgrades the packages listed by brew outdated
. It also supports the options listed above for brew outdated
and operates accordingly.
The original answer and the 2018 update are kept for historical reasons.
In the meantime, the command brew cask upgrade
has been implemented and can be used instead of brew cask reinstall
in the script provided in the original answer.
It also works without arguments and upgrades all the casks displayed by brew cask outdated
. It can replace the for
block in the script that now becomes:
# Upgrade Homebrew and the information about formulas
$ brew update
# List the outdated casks (optional)
$ brew cask outdated
# Upgrade all outdated casks
$ brew cask upgrade
Sometimes, brew cask outdated
does not list all the outdated casks. This is by design. Some casks mark themselves as auto-updateable while others use the keyword latest
as their version. These two categories of casks are not listed by brew cask outdated
. To list them one have to add the --greedy
option in the command line of brew cask outdated
:
$ brew cask outdated --greedy
This command includes in its output the casks mentioned above. Those having latest
as their version cannot be checked and are always listed, those marked as auto-updateable are checked and listed only if they are outdated indeed.
The command brew cask upgrade
also accepts the --greedy
option (internally it uses brew cask outdated
to find the list of packages to upgrade). Using it ensures your system is up to date with the additional cost of reinstalling some applications that are not outdated.
You are mixing brew
commands with brew cask
commands and it doesn't work this way.
Homebrew Cask is a component of Homebrew that allows management of graphical applications. It started as an extension of the original Homebrew; it is now an integrated command of brew
. Homebrew itself manages only command line applications.
Upgrading all outdated programs installed with brew
(command line programs) is easy:
# Tell Homebrew to update itself and its taps (repositories of programs)
$ brew update
# List the outdated programs
$ brew outdated
# Upgrade all the outdated programs and their dependencies
$ brew upgrade
The brew update
and brew outdated
steps are optional. brew upgrade
internally calls brew update
if the last update happened too much time in the past. brew outdated
only lists the outdated installed programs; it is useful if you do the upgrade manually and you don't want to upgrade everything. In this case you can pick the programs you want to upgrade and run brew upgrade <program>
for each program you want to update. Replace <program>
with the package name displayed by brew outdated
.
Upgrading all outdated graphical programs is not that straightforward at the moment. The process is slightly different than the above.
The first step is to run brew update
. It updates Homebrew code and the taps (a tap is a repository of programs managed by Homebrew). Homebrew Cask provides the sub-command brew cask update
but it is just an alias of brew update
. You can use any of them; brew update
is preferred because it is shorter.
The second step is to run brew cask outdated
. This command shows the list of outdated programs managed by Cask, together with the installed version and the new version. The option --quiet
tells it to show only the package names, without versions. You'll need this for automation on the third step.
The next paragraphs are deprecated since 2018, when the command brew cask upgrade
has been implemented. The new flow is described in the section "2018 update" above.
Unfortunately there is no
brew cask upgrade
command at this moment (it is planned but not implemented yet).brew upgrade
doesn't know how to handle the programs installed bybrew cask
either.
brew cask reinstall
can be used instead of the missingbrew cask upgrade
. Unlikebrew upgrade
, that upgrades all the outdated packages,brew cask reinstall
requires the name of one and only one package. This requires looping through the list returned bybrew cask outdated
.A short shell script that upgrades all outdated programs installed using Homebrew Cask can look like this:
brew update for i in $(brew cask outdated --quiet); do brew cask reinstall $i done
Drawbacks
There are programs that require administrator rights to install drivers or other system components. Some of them ask for your password or for various confirmations using a graphical dialog box.
brew cask
itself sometimes asks for your password in the command line.All these make upgrading the outdated programs automatically not always possible.
You may think that all these can be circumvented using
sudo
. However, the Homebrew developers know better and they programed thebrew
command to display a message and exit when it is executed as root (and this is the right way to do it.)