man
1 flatpak
FLATPAK(1) flatpak FLATPAK(1)
NAME
flatpak - Build, install and run applications and runtimes
SYNOPSIS
flatpak [OPTION...] {COMMAND}
DESCRIPTION
Flatpak is a tool for managing applications and the runtimes they use.
In the Flatpak model, applications can be built and distributed
independently from the host system they are used on, and they are
isolated from the host system ('sandboxed') to some degree, at runtime.
Flatpak can operate in system-wide or per-user mode. The system-wide
data (runtimes, applications and configuration) is located in
$prefix/var/lib/flatpak/, and the per-user data is in
$HOME/.local/share/flatpak/. Below these locations, there is a local
repository in the repo/ subdirectory and installed runtimes and
applications are in the corresponding runtime/ and app/ subdirectories.
System-wide remotes can be statically preconfigured by dropping
flatpakrepo files into /etc/flatpak/remotes.d/.
In addition to the system-wide installation in
$prefix/var/lib/flatpak/, which is always considered the default one
unless overridden, more system-wide installations can be defined via
configuration files in /etc/flatpak/installations.d/, which must define
at least the id of the installation and the absolute path to it. Other
optional parameters like DisplayName, Priority or StorageType are also
supported.
Flatpak uses OSTree to distribute and deploy data. The repositories it
uses are OSTree repositories and can be manipulated with the ostree
utility. Installed runtimes and applications are OSTree checkouts.
Basic commands for building flatpaks such as build-init, build and
build-finish are included in the flatpak utility. For higher-level
build support, see the separate flatpak-builder(1) tool.
Flatpak supports installing from sideload repos. These are partial
copies of a repository (generated by flatpak create-usb) that are used
as installation source when offline (and online as a performance
improvement). Such repositories are configured by creating symlinks to
the sideload sources in the sideload-repos subdirectory of the
installation directory (i.e. typically
/var/lib/flatpak/sideload-repos). Additionally symlinks can be created
in /run/flatpak/sideload-repos which is a better location for
non-persistent sources (as it is cleared on reboot). These symlinks can
point to either the directory given to flatpak create-usb which by
default writes to the subpath .ostree/repo, or directly to an ostree
repo.
OPTIONS
The following global options are understood. Individual commands have
their own options.
-h, --help
Show help options and exit.
-v, --verbose
Show debug information during command processing. Use -vv for more
detail.
--ostree-verbose
Show OSTree debug information during command processing.
--version
Print version information and exit.
--default-arch
Print the default arch and exit.
--supported-arches
Print the supported arches in priority order and exit.
--gl-drivers
Print the list of active gl drivers and exit.
--installations
Print paths of system installations and exit.
--print-system-only
When the flatpak --print-updated-env command is run, only print the
environment for system flatpak installations, not including the
user's home installation.
--print-updated-env
Print the set of environment variables needed to use flatpaks,
amending the current set of environment variables. This is intended
to be used in a systemd environment generator, and should not need
to be run manually.
COMMANDS
Commands for managing installed applications and runtimes:
flatpak-install(1)
Install an application or a runtime from a remote or bundle.
flatpak-update(1)
Update an installed application or runtime.
flatpak-uninstall(1)
Uninstall an installed application or runtime.
flatpak-mask(1)
Mask out updates and automatic installation.
flatpak-pin(1)
Pin runtimes to prevent automatic removal.
flatpak-list(1)
List installed applications and/or runtimes.
flatpak-info(1)
Show information for an installed application or runtime.
flatpak-history(1)
Show history.
flatpak-config(1)
Manage flatpak configuration.
flatpak-repair(1)
Repair flatpak installation.
flatpak-create-usb(1)
Copy apps and/or runtimes onto removable media.
Commands for finding applications and runtimes:
flatpak-search(1)
Search for applications and runtimes.
Commands for managing running applications:
flatpak-run(1)
Run an application.
flatpak-kill(1)
Stop a running application.
flatpak-override(1)
Override permissions for an application.
flatpak-make-current(1)
Specify the default version to run.
flatpak-enter(1)
Enter the namespace of a running application.
Commands for managing file access:
flatpak-document-export(1)
Grant an application access to a specific file.
flatpak-document-unexport(1)
Revoke access to a specific file.
flatpak-document-info(1)
Show information about a specific file.
flatpak-documents(1)
List exported files.
Commands for managing the dynamic permission store:
flatpak-permission-remove(1)
Remove item from permission store.
flatpak-permissions(1)
List permissions.
flatpak-permission-show(1)
Show app permissions.
flatpak-permission-reset(1)
Reset app permissions.
flatpak-permission-set(1)
Set app permissions.
Commands for managing remote repositories:
flatpak-remotes(1)
List all configured remote repositories.
flatpak-remote-add(1)
Add a new remote repository.
flatpak-remote-modify(1)
Modify properties of a configured remote repository.
flatpak-remote-delete(1)
Delete a configured remote repository.
flatpak-remote-ls(1)
List contents of a configured remote repository.
flatpak-remote-info(1)
Show information about a ref in a configured remote repository.
Commands for building applications:
flatpak-build-init(1)
Initialize a build directory.
flatpak-build(1)
Run a build command in a build directory.
flatpak-build-finish(1)
Finalizes a build directory for export.
flatpak-build-export(1)
Export a build directory to a repository.
flatpak-build-bundle(1)
Create a bundle file from a ref in a local repository.
flatpak-build-import-bundle(1)
Import a file bundle into a local repository.
flatpak-build-sign(1)
Sign an application or runtime after its been exported.
flatpak-build-update-repo(1)
Update the summary file in a repository.
flatpak-build-commit-from(1)
Create a new commit based on an existing ref.
flatpak-repo(1)
Print information about a repo.
Commands available inside the sandbox:
flatpak-spawn(1)
Run a command in another sandbox.
FILE FORMATS
File formats that are used by Flatpak commands:
flatpak-flatpakref(5)
Reference to a remote for an application or runtime
flatpak-flatpakrepo(5)
Reference to a remote
flatpak-remote(5)
Configuration for a remote
flatpak-installation(5)
Configuration for an installation location
flatpak-metadata(5)
Information about an application or runtime
ENVIRONMENT
Besides standard environment variables such as XDG_DATA_DIRS and
XDG_DATA_HOME, flatpak is consulting some of its own.
FLATPAK_USER_DIR
The location of the per-user installation. If this is not set,
$XDG_DATA_HOME/flatpak is used.
FLATPAK_SYSTEM_DIR
The location of the default system-wide installation. If this is
not set, /var/lib/flatpak is used (unless overridden at build time
by --localstatedir or --with-system-install-dir).
FLATPAK_SYSTEM_CACHE_DIR
The location where temporary child repositories will be created
during pulls into the system-wide installation. If this is not set,
a directory in /var/tmp/ is used. This is useful because it is more
likely to be on the same filesystem as the system repository (thus
increasing the chances for e.g. reflink copying), and we can avoid
filling the user's home directory with temporary data.
FLATPAK_CONFIG_DIR
The location of flatpak site configuration. If this is not set,
/etc/flatpak is used (unless overridden at build time by
--sysconfdir).
FLATPAK_RUN_DIR
The location of flatpak runtime global files. If this is not set,
/run/flatpak is used.
SEE ALSO
ostree(1), ostree.repo(5), flatpak-remote(5), flatpak-installation(5),
https://www.flatpak.org
flatpak FLATPAK(1)