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update-alternatives(1)		  dpkg suite		update-alternatives(1)

NAME
       update-alternatives  -  maintain	 symbolic  links  determining  default
       commands

SYNOPSIS
       update-alternatives [option...] command

DESCRIPTION
       update-alternatives   creates,	removes,   maintains   and    displays
       information about the symbolic links comprising the Debian alternatives
       system.

       It  is  possible	 for  several  programs	fulfilling the same or similar
       functions to be installed on a single system at	the  same  time.   For
       example,	 many  systems	have  several  text editors installed at once.
       This gives choice to the	users of a system,  allowing  each  to	use  a
       different  editor,  if desired, but makes it difficult for a program to
       make a good choice for  an  editor  to  invoke  if  the	user  has  not
       specified a particular preference.

       Debian's	 alternatives  system  aims  to	solve this problem.  A generic
       name in the filesystem is shared	by all files providing interchangeable
       functionality.  The alternatives	system and  the	 system	 administrator
       together	 determine  which  actual  file	 is referenced by this generic
       name.  For example, if the text	editors	 ed(1)	and  nvi(1)  are  both
       installed on the	system,	the alternatives system	will cause the generic
       name  /usr/bin/editor  to  refer	to /usr/bin/nvi	by default. The	system
       administrator can override this and cause it to	refer  to  /usr/bin/ed
       instead,	 and the alternatives system will not alter this setting until
       explicitly requested to do so.

       The generic name	 is  not  a  direct  symbolic  link  to	 the  selected
       alternative.   Instead,	it  is	a  symbolic  link  to  a  name	in the
       alternatives directory, which in	turn is	a symbolic link	to the	actual
       file  referenced.   This	 is  done  so  that the	system administrator's
       changes can be confined within the /usr/local/etc  directory:  the  FHS
       (q.v.) gives reasons why	this is	a Good Thing.

       When  each  package providing a file with a particular functionality is
       installed, changed or removed, update-alternatives is called to	update
       information    about    that   file   in	  the	alternatives   system.
       update-alternatives is usually called from the postinst (configure)  or
       prerm (remove and deconfigure) scripts in Debian	packages.

       It  is often useful for a number	of alternatives	to be synchronized, so
       that they are changed as	a group; for example, when several versions of
       the  vi(1)  editor  are	installed,  the	  man	page   referenced   by
       /usr/share/man/man1/vi.1	should correspond to the executable referenced
       by  /usr/bin/vi.	  update-alternatives  handles this by means of	master
       and slave links;	when the master	is changed, any	associated slaves  are
       changed	too.   A  master link and its associated slaves	make up	a link
       group.

       Each link group is, at any given	time, in one of	two  modes:  automatic
       or  manual.  When a group is in automatic mode, the alternatives	system
       will automatically decide,  as  packages	 are  installed	 and  removed,
       whether	and how	to update the links.  In manual	mode, the alternatives
       system will retain the choice of	the administrator and  avoid  changing
       the links (except when something	is broken).

       Link groups are in automatic mode when they are first introduced	to the
       system.	 If  the  system  administrator	 makes changes to the system's
       automatic   settings,   this   will   be	  noticed   the	  next	  time
       update-alternatives  is	run on the changed link's group, and the group
       will automatically be switched to manual	mode.

       Each alternative	has a priority associated with it.  When a link	 group
       is  in  automatic  mode,	 the alternatives pointed to by	members	of the
       group will be those which have the highest priority.

       When using the --config option, update-alternatives will	 list  all  of
       the  choices  for  the  link  group  of	which given name is the	master
       alternative name.  The current choice is	marked with a `*'.   You  will
       then  be	prompted for your choice regarding this	link group.  Depending
       on the choice made, the link group might	no longer be in	auto mode. You
       will need to use	the --auto option in order to return to	the  automatic
       mode  (or  you  can  rerun  --config  and  select  the  entry marked as
       automatic).

       If you want to configure	non-interactively you can use the --set	option
       instead (see below).

       Different packages providing the	same file need to do so	cooperatively.
       In other	words, the usage of update-alternatives	is mandatory  for  all
       involved	 packages  in  such  case. It is not possible to override some
       file  in	 a  package  that  does	 not  employ  the  update-alternatives
       mechanism.

TERMINOLOGY
       Since  the  activities  of update-alternatives are quite	involved, some
       specific	terms will help	to explain its operation.

       generic name (or	alternative link)
	      A	name, like /usr/bin/editor, which refers, via the alternatives
	      system, to one of	a number of files of similar function.

       alternative name
	      The name of a symbolic link in the alternatives directory.

       alternative (or alternative path)
	      The name of a specific file in the filesystem, which may be made
	      accessible via a generic name using the alternatives system.

       alternatives directory
	      A	directory, by default /usr/local/etc/alternatives,  containing
	      the symlinks.

       administrative directory
	      A	 directory,  by	 default /var/db/dpkg/alternatives, containing
	      update-alternatives' state information.

       link group
	      A	set of related symlinks, intended to be	updated	as a group.

       master link
	      The alternative link in a	link group which  determines  how  the
	      other links in the group are configured.

       slave link
	      An  alternative  link in a link group which is controlled	by the
	      setting of the master link.

       automatic mode
	      When a link group	is in automatic	mode, the alternatives	system
	      ensures  that  the  links	 in  the  group	 point	to the highest
	      priority alternative appropriate for the group.

       manual mode
	      When a link group	is in manual  mode,  the  alternatives	system
	      will   not  make	any  changes  to  the  system  administrator's
	      settings.

COMMANDS
       --install link name path	priority [--slave link name path]...
	      Add a group of alternatives to the system.  link is the  generic
	      name for the master link,	name is	the name of its	symlink	in the
	      alternatives  directory,	and  path  is  the  alternative	 being
	      introduced for the master	link.  The arguments after --slave are
	      the generic name,	symlink	name in	the alternatives directory and
	      the alternative path for a slave link.   Zero  or	 more  --slave
	      options,	each  followed	by  three arguments, may be specified.
	      Note that	the master alternative must exist  or  the  call  will
	      fail.   However  if  a  slave  alternative  doesn't  exist,  the
	      corresponding  slave  alternative	 link  will  simply   not   be
	      installed	(a warning will	still be displayed). If	some real file
	      is  installed  where an alternative link has to be installed, it
	      is kept unless --force is	used.

	      If  the  alternative  name  specified  exists  already  in   the
	      alternatives  system's records, the information supplied will be
	      added as a new set of alternatives for the group.	 Otherwise,  a
	      new  group,  set	to  automatic  mode,  will  be added with this
	      information.  If the group is in automatic mode, and  the	 newly
	      added  alternatives' priority is higher than any other installed
	      alternatives for this group, the symlinks	 will  be  updated  to
	      point to the newly added alternatives.

       --set name path
	      Set   the	 program  path	as  alternative	 for  name.   This  is
	      equivalent  to  --config	but  is	  non-interactive   and	  thus
	      scriptable.

       --remove	name path
	      Remove  an  alternative  and  all	of its associated slave	links.
	      name is a	name in	the alternatives directory,  and  path	is  an
	      absolute	filename  to  which  name  could be linked. If name is
	      indeed linked to path, name will be updated to point to  another
	      appropriate  alternative (and the	group is put back in automatic
	      mode),  or  removed  if  there  is  no  such  alternative	 left.
	      Associated   slave   links   will	  be   updated	 or   removed,
	      correspondingly.	If the link is not currently pointing to path,
	      no links are changed; only the information about the alternative
	      is removed.

       --remove-all name
	      Remove all alternatives and all of their associated slave	links.
	      name is a	name in	the alternatives directory.

       --all  Call --config on all alternatives. It can	be  usefully  combined
	      with  --skip-auto	to review and configure	all alternatives which
	      are not configured in automatic mode.  Broken  alternatives  are
	      also   displayed.	   Thus	  a  simple  way  to  fix  all	broken
	      alternatives is to call yes  ''  |  update-alternatives  --force
	      --all.

       --auto name
	      Switch  the  link	 group	behind	the  alternative  for  name to
	      automatic	mode.  In the process,	the  master  symlink  and  its
	      slaves  are  updated  to point to	the highest priority installed
	      alternatives.

       --display name
	      Display information about	the link group.	 Information displayed
	      includes the group's mode	(auto or manual), the master and slave
	      links, which alternative the master link	currently  points  to,
	      what  other  alternatives	are available (and their corresponding
	      slave  alternatives),  and  the  highest	priority   alternative
	      currently	installed.

       --get-selections
	      List  all	 master	 alternative  names  (those controlling	a link
	      group) and their	status	(since	version	 1.15.0).   Each  line
	      contains	up  to 3 fields	(separated by one or more spaces). The
	      first field is the alternative  name,  the  second  one  is  the
	      status  (either  auto  or	manual), and the last one contains the
	      current choice in	the alternative	(beware: it's a	 filename  and
	      thus might contain spaces).

       --set-selections
	      Read  configuration  of  alternatives  on	 standard input	in the
	      format  generated	 by  --get-selections  and  reconfigure	  them
	      accordingly (since version 1.15.0).

       --query name
	      Display  information  about  the link group like --display does,
	      but in a	machine	 parseable  way	 (since	 version  1.15.0,  see
	      section QUERY FORMAT below).

       --list name
	      Display all targets of the link group.

       --config	name
	      Show  available alternatives for a link group and	allow the user
	      to interactively select which one	to  use.  The  link  group  is
	      updated.

       --help Show the usage message and exit.

       --version
	      Show the version and exit.

OPTIONS
       --altdir	directory
	      Specifies	 the  alternatives  directory,	when  this  is	to  be
	      different	from the default.

       --admindir directory
	      Specifies	the administrative  directory,	when  this  is	to  be
	      different	from the default.

       --log file
	      Specifies	 the  log file (since version 1.15.0), when this is to
	      be different from	the default (/var/log/alternatives.log).

       --force
	      Allow replacing or dropping any  real  file  that	 is  installed
	      where an alternative link	has to be installed or removed.

       --skip-auto
	      Skip  configuration  prompt  for alternatives which are properly
	      configured in automatic mode. This option	is only	relevant  with
	      --config or --all.

       --quiet
	      Do not generate any comments unless errors occur.

       --verbose
	      Generate more comments about what	is being done.

       --debug
	      Generate	even  more comments, helpful for debugging, about what
	      is being done (since version 1.19.3).

EXIT STATUS
       0      The requested action was successfully performed.

       2      Problems were encountered	whilst parsing	the  command  line  or
	      performing the action.

ENVIRONMENT
       DPKG_ADMINDIR
	      If set and the --admindir	option has not been specified, it will
	      be used as the base administrative directory.

FILES
       /usr/local/etc/alternatives/
	      The  default  alternatives  directory.  Can be overridden	by the
	      --altdir option.

       /var/db/dpkg/alternatives/
	      The default administration directory.  Can be overridden by  the
	      --admindir option.

QUERY FORMAT
       The  --query format is using an RFC822-like flat	format.	It's made of n
       + 1 blocks where	n is the  number  of  alternatives  available  in  the
       queried link group. The first block contains the	following fields:

       Name: name
	      The alternative name in the alternative directory.

       Link: link
	      The generic name of the alternative.

       Slaves: list-of-slaves
	      When  this field is present, the next lines hold all slave links
	      associated to the	master link of the alternative.	There  is  one
	      slave  per  line.	Each line contains one space, the generic name
	      of the slave alternative,	another	space, and  the	 path  to  the
	      slave link.

       Status: status
	      The status of the	alternative (auto or manual).

       Best: best-choice
	      The  path	 of  the  best	alternative  for  this link group. Not
	      present if there is no alternatives available.

       Value: currently-selected-alternative
	      The path of the currently	selected alternative. It can also take
	      the magic	value none. It is used if the link doesn't exist.

       The other blocks	describe the available	alternatives  in  the  queried
       link group:

       Alternative: path-of-this-alternative
	      Path to this block's alternative.

       Priority: priority-value
	      Value of the priority of this alternative.

       Slaves: list-of-slaves
	      When  this  field	 is  present,  the  next  lines	hold all slave
	      alternatives associated to the master link of  the  alternative.
	      There  is	 one slave per line. Each line contains	one space, the
	      generic name of the slave	alternative, another  space,  and  the
	      path to the slave	alternative.

   Example
       $ update-alternatives --query editor
       Name: editor
       Link: /usr/bin/editor
       Slaves:
	editor.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/editor.1.gz
	editor.fr.1.gz /usr/share/man/fr/man1/editor.1.gz
	editor.it.1.gz /usr/share/man/it/man1/editor.1.gz
	editor.pl.1.gz /usr/share/man/pl/man1/editor.1.gz
	editor.ru.1.gz /usr/share/man/ru/man1/editor.1.gz
       Status: auto
       Best: /usr/bin/vim.basic
       Value: /usr/bin/vim.basic

       Alternative: /bin/ed
       Priority: -100
       Slaves:
	editor.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/ed.1.gz

       Alternative: /usr/bin/vim.basic
       Priority: 50
       Slaves:
	editor.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1/vim.1.gz
	editor.fr.1.gz /usr/share/man/fr/man1/vim.1.gz
	editor.it.1.gz /usr/share/man/it/man1/vim.1.gz
	editor.pl.1.gz /usr/share/man/pl/man1/vim.1.gz
	editor.ru.1.gz /usr/share/man/ru/man1/vim.1.gz

DIAGNOSTICS
       With  --verbose	update-alternatives  chatters  incessantly  about  its
       activities  on  its  standard  output  channel.	 If  problems	occur,
       update-alternatives  outputs  error  messages  on  its  standard	 error
       channel and returns an exit status of 2.	 These diagnostics  should  be
       self-explanatory;  if  you do not find them so, please report this as a
       bug.

EXAMPLES
       There are several packages which	provide	a text editor compatible  with
       vi,  for	 example  nvi  and vim.	Which one is used is controlled	by the
       link group vi, which includes links for	the  program  itself  and  the
       associated manpage.

       To  display  the	 available  packages  which provide vi and the current
       setting for it, use the --display action:

	      update-alternatives --display vi

       To choose a particular vi implementation, use this command as root  and
       then select a number from the list:

	      update-alternatives --config vi

       To  go  back  to	 having	the vi implementation chosen automatically, do
       this as root:

	      update-alternatives --auto vi

SEE ALSO
       ln(1), FHS, the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.

1.19.8				  2022-05-24		update-alternatives(1)

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