263

I have the following packages installed with Chocolatey.

choco list

> choco list
Chocolatey v0.9.9.2                                      
adobereader 11.0.10                                      
ccleaner 5.03.5128                                       
chocolatey 0.9.9.2                                       
ConEmu 14.9.23.0                                         
gimp 2.8.14.1                                            
git 1.9.5.20150114

One week later the GIMP package updated to 2.9 and the Git package is updated to 1.9.6 on the chocolatey.org website, but other packages are not updated.

Two weeks later I need to run a command in cmd to show the following result:

> some command
git current local version (1.9.5), latest version (1.9.6) is available for upgrade
gimp current local version (2.8), latest version (2.9) is available for upgrade

What is the good way to compose such command? (Or if there is a command option built into Chocolatey itself, what it would be?)

4 Answers4

290

Note: You likely need to do the following commands in an administrative cmd/powershell prompt.

If you have choco 0.9.9.6+, you can use the outdated command.

choco outdated

If you have 0.9.9+ installed:

choco upgrade all --noop

If you have version 0.9.8.33 or below installed:

choco version all

Following that, if you actually want to upgrade - you can follow with:

cup all -y

Note: -y will only work with 0.9.8.33+.

ferventcoder
  • 4,997
31

Just run the case, and choco said I should use this

choco list -lo

That did the trick for me, so here 2c from me.

4

Addition from @feventcoder

choco version all will result you a warning of

DEPRECATION NOTICE - choco version command is deprecated and will be removed in version 1.0.0. Please use choco upgrade <pgkname> --noop instead.

So it mean you should learn that it might not support the version command anymore.

Sure that you need to upgrade your chocolatey version to 0.9.9+ or latest.

By the command choco upgrade chocolatey

And then call cup all -y to install all upgrade to your system.

3

Use "cver"

The quickest way if you want to find only the local packages installed is to issue the following command to a DOS prompt:

cver all -localonly

Or even easier to remember and type:

cver all -lo

This avoids unnecessary querying.