Cron YUM How to use yum-cron to automatically update RHEL/CentOS Linux

The yum command line tool is used to install and update software packages under RHEL / CentOS Linux server. I know how to apply updates using yum update command line, but I would like to use cron to update packages where appropriate manually. How do I configure yum to install software patches/updates automatically with cron?

You need to install yum-cron package. It provides files needed to run yum updates as a cron job. Install this package if you want auto yum updates nightly via cron.

 

 

 

 

How to install yum cron on a CentOS/RHEL 6.x/7.x

Type the following yum command on:
$ sudo yum install yum-cron
How to install yum-cron on CentOS RHEL server
Turn on service using systemctl command on CentOS/RHEL 7.x:
$ sudo systemctl enable yum-cron.service
$ sudo systemctl start yum-cron.service
$ sudo systemctl status yum-cron.service

If you are using CentOS/RHEL 6.x, run:
$ sudo chkconfig yum-cron on
$ sudo service yum-cron start

How to turn on yum-cron-service on CentOS or RHEL server
yum-cron is an alternate interface to yum. Very convenient way to call yum from cron. It provides methods to keep repository metadata up to date, and to check for, download, and apply updates. Rather than accepting many different command line arguments, the different functions of yum-cron can be accessed through config files.

How to configure yum-cron to automatically update RHEL/CentOS Linux

You need to edit /etc/yum/yum-cron.conf and /etc/yum/yum-cron-hourly.conf files using a text editor such as vi command:
$ sudo vi /etc/yum/yum-cron.conf
Make sure updates should be applied when they are available
apply_updates = yes
You can set the address to send email messages from. Please note that ‘localhost’ will be replaced with the value of system_name.
email_from = root@localhost
List of addresses to send messages to.
email_to = your-it-support@some-domain-name
Name of the host to connect to to send email messages.
email_host = localhost
If you do not want to update kernel package add the following on CentOS/RHEL 7.x:
exclude=kernel*
For RHEL/CentOS 6.x add the following to exclude kernel package from updating:
YUM_PARAMETER=kernel*
Save and close the file in vi/vim. You also need to update /etc/yum/yum-cron-hourly.conf file if you want to apply update hourly. Otherwise /etc/yum/yum-cron.conf will run on daily using the following cron job (us cat command:
$ cat /etc/cron.daily/0yum-daily.cron
Sample outputs:

#!/bin/bash
 
# Only run if this flag is set. The flag is created by the yum-cron init
# script when the service is started -- this allows one to use chkconfig and
# the standard "service stop|start" commands to enable or disable yum-cron.
if [[ ! -f /var/lock/subsys/yum-cron ]]; then
  exit 0
fi
 
# Action!
exec /usr/sbin/yum-cron /etc/yum/yum-cron-hourly.conf
[root@centos7-box yum]# cat /etc/cron.daily/0yum-daily.cron
#!/bin/bash
 
# Only run if this flag is set. The flag is created by the yum-cron init
# script when the service is started -- this allows one to use chkconfig and
# the standard "service stop|start" commands to enable or disable yum-cron.
if [[ ! -f /var/lock/subsys/yum-cron ]]; then
  exit 0
fi
 
# Action!
exec /usr/sbin/yum-cron

That is all. Now your system will update automatically everyday using yum-cron. See man page of yum-cron for more details:
$ man yum-cron

Method 2 – Use shell scripts

Warning: The following method is outdated. Do not use it on RHEL/CentOS 6.x/7.x. I kept it below for historical reasons only when I used it on CentOS/RHEL version 4.x/5.x.

Let us see how to configure CentOS/RHEL for yum automatic update retrieval and installation of security packages. You can use yum-updatesd service provided with CentOS / RHEL servers. However, this service provides a few overheads. You can create daily or weekly updates with the following shell script. Create

  • /etc/cron.daily/yumupdate.sh to apply updates one a day.
  • /etc/cron.weekly/yumupdate.sh to apply updates once a week.

Sample shell script to update system

A shell script that instructs yum to update any packages it finds via cron:

#!/bin/bash
YUM=/usr/bin/yum
$YUM -y -R 120 -d 0 -e 0 update yum
$YUM -y -R 10 -e 0 -d 0 update

(Code listing -01: /etc/cron.daily/yumupdate.sh)

Where,

    1. First command will update yum itself and next will apply system updates.
    2. -R 120 : Sets the maximum amount of time yum will wait before performing a command
    3. -e 0 : Sets the error level to 0 (range 0 – 10). 0 means print only critical errors about which you must be told.
    4. <li

-d 0 : Sets the debugging level to 0 – turns up or down the amount of things that are printed. (range: 0 – 10).

  • -y : Assume yes; assume that the answer to any question which would be asked is yes.

 

Make sure you setup executable permission:
# chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/yumupdate.sh

0 (0)
Article Rating (No Votes)
Rate this article
Attachments
There are no attachments for this article.
Comments
There are no comments for this article. Be the first to post a comment.
Full Name
Email Address
Security Code Security Code
Related Articles RSS Feed
HowTo: Retrieve Email from a POP3 Server using the Command Line
Viewed 12834 times since Mon, Feb 18, 2019
RHCS6: Reduce a Global Filesystem 2 (GFS2)
Viewed 3880 times since Sun, Jun 3, 2018
bash mistakes This page is a compilation of common mistakes made by bash users. Each example is flawed in some way.
Viewed 9629 times since Sun, Dec 6, 2020
3 Ways to Check Linux Kernel Version in Command Line
Viewed 12230 times since Fri, Apr 19, 2019
How to disable SSH cipher/ MAC algorithms for Linux and Unix
Viewed 49579 times since Fri, Aug 21, 2020
How To Use the Linux Auditing System on CentOS 7
Viewed 4551 times since Fri, Apr 5, 2019
Script to Offline and Remove A Disk In Linux
Viewed 2409 times since Mon, Jan 28, 2019
Df command in Linux not updating actual diskspace, wrong data
Viewed 3408 times since Wed, May 30, 2018
Top 20 OpenSSH Server Best Security Practices ssh linux aix
Viewed 6609 times since Fri, May 15, 2020
How to stop and disable auditd on RHEL 7
Viewed 41573 times since Tue, Aug 6, 2019