How To Install run-on-bat on Fedora 34
In this tutorial, we will discuss How To Install run-on-bat on Fedora 34
using dnf
and yum
package managers.
Also, we will demonstrate how to uninstall and update
run-on-bat
as well.
One-liner Install Command
If you are only interested in the installation command, here is a quick answer for you:
sudo yum makecache && sudo yum -y install tlp
or if you use dnf
:
sudo dnf makecache && sudo dnf -y install tlp
But if you are interested in the details with step-by-step instructions, the following information will be helpful.
What is run-on-bat
and How to Install It?
Short description: Save battery power on laptops
First things first, you will need access to a server or computer running Fedora 34. This guide was written specifically with a server running Fedora 34 in mind, although it should also work on older, supported versions of the operating system.
Also, make sure you are running a regular, non-root user with sudo privileges configured on your server. When you have an account available, log in as your non-root user to begin.
There are several ways to install run-on-bat on Fedora 34. You can use (links are clickable):
In the following sections, we will describe each method in detail. You can choose one of them or refer to the recommended one.
Install run-on-bat on Fedora 34 using dnf
First, update dnf packages database with dnf
by running the next command:
sudo dnf makecache --refresh
After updating database,
You can install run-on-bat using dnf
by running the
following command:
sudo dnf -y install tlp
Install run-on-bat on Fedora 34 using yum
Because run-on-bat is available in Fedora 34’s default
repositories,
it is possible to install it from these repositories using the yum
packaging
system.
To begin, update local packages database with yum
using the following command.
sudo yum makecache --refresh
Now can install run-on-bat package on your server/computer by running the following command:
sudo yum -y install tlp
How to upgrade (update) a single package run-on-bat using yum?
To update all the packages available on the system:
yum update
If you want to update a specific package like run-on-bat in this example you should use the following command:
yum update tlp
To downgrade a package to an earlier version:
yum downgrade tlp
How to Upgrade run-on-bat on Fedora 34 with dnf?
When you run the dnf update
, all system packages with available updates are updated.
However, if you want to upgrade a single package, then you would have to pass the package name as
the argument to the dnf update command.
dnf update tlp
How To remove run-on-bat from Fedora 34
To uninstall only the run-on-bat
package you can execute
the
following command:
sudo dnf remove tlp
Extra info and code examples
TLP is an advanced power management tool for Linux. It comes with a default configuration already optimized for battery life. At the same time it is highly customizable to fulfil specific user requirements. TLP supplies separate settings profiles for AC and battery power and can enable or disable bluetooth, WiFi and WWAN radio devices upon system startup. For ThinkPads it provides a unified way to configure charging thresholds and recalibrate the battery for all models which support it (via tp-smapi or acpi-call). TLP is a pure command line tool with automated background tasks, it does not contain a GUI.
- Maintainer: Raphaël Halimi
- Sources url: http://linrunner.de/tlp
- Section/Category: utils
Conclusion
You now have a full guide on how to install run-on-bat
using dnf
and yum
package managers.
Also, we showed how to update manually as a single package and different ways to uninstall
the run-on-bat from Fedora 34.