# Update Netdata The update process can differ based on the installation type: - Install types starting with `binpkg` or ending with `build` or `static` can be updated using our [kickstart script update method](#unix). - Installs with an installation type of `custom` usually indicate installing a third-party package through the system package manager. To update these installations, you should update the package just like you would any other package on your system. - macOS users should check [our update instructions for macOS](#macos). - Manually built installs should check [our update instructions for manual builds](#manual-installation-from-git). ## Determine which installation method you used You can run the following to determine your installation type: ```bash netdata -W buildinfo | grep -E 'Installation Type|Install type:' ``` The following table contains all possible installation types: | Installation-type | Description | |--------------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | binpkg-rpm | RPM-based native packages shipped from Netdata's repos. | | binpkg-deb | DEB-based native packages shipped from Netdata's repos. | | kickstart-build | Build from source with the kickstart script's `--build-only` option. | | kickstart-static | Installed the static builds, shipped from netdata via the kickstart script's (option: `--static-only`). | | manual-static-ARCH | Manually installed static Agent binaries by downloading archives from GitHub and installing them manually. Offline installations are part of this category. | | legacy-build | Used for pre-existing kickstart.sh or netdata-installer.sh installations. This exist because we cannot determine how the install originally happened. | | legacy-static | Same as legacy-build, but for static installs. | | oci | Installed using official Docker images from Netdata, though not necessarily running on Docker | | custom | Anything not covered by the other identifiers, including manual builds, manually running netdata-installer.sh, and third-party packages (community). | | Unknown | Same as custom. | If you're using an older Netdata version or the above command doesn't output anything, try our one-line installation script in dry-run mode. Run the following command to determine the appropriate update method: ```bash wget -O /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh https://get.netdata.cloud/kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh --dry-run ``` > **Note** > > if you installed Netdata using an installation prefix, you will need to add an `--install-prefix` option specifying that prefix to make sure it finds the existing installation. If you see a line starting with `--- Would attempt to update existing installation by running the updater script located at:`, then our [kickstart script update method](#unix) will work for you. Otherwise, it should either indicate that the installation type is not supported (which probably means you either have a `custom` install or built Netdata manually) or indicate that it would create a new install (which means that you either used a non-standard install path, or that you don’t actually have Netdata installed). ## UNIX In most cases, you can update Netdata using our one-line kickstart script. This script will automatically run the update script installed as part of the initial install and preserve the existing installation options you specified. If you installed Netdata using an installation prefix, you will need to add an `--install-prefix` option specifying that prefix to this command to make sure it finds Netdata. ```bash wget -O /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh https://get.netdata.cloud/kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh ``` ## Windows To update Netdata, [download](/packaging/windows/WINDOWS_INSTALLER.md#download-the-msi-installer) the latest installer and reinstall the Agent. > **Note** > > The Windows Agent is currently under beta and only available for Nightly releases, and the installer can be found in our [nightlies repo](https://github.com/netdata/netdata-nightlies). A stable version will be released soon. ## macOS If you installed Netdata on your macOS system using Homebrew, you can explicitly request an update: ```bash brew upgrade netdata ``` Homebrew downloads the latest Netdata via the [formula](https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/master/Formula/n/netdata.rb), ensures all dependencies are met, and updates Netdata via reinstallation. ## Manual installation from Git If you installed [Netdata manually from Git](/packaging/installer/methods/manual.md) run our automatic requirements installer, which works on many Linux distributions, to ensure your system has the dependencies necessary for new features. ```bash bash <(curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/netdata/netdata/master/packaging/installer/install-required-packages.sh) ``` Navigate to the directory where you first cloned the Netdata repository, pull the latest source code, and run `netdata-install.sh` again. This process compiles Netdata with the latest source code and updates it via reinstallation. ```bash cd /path/to/netdata/git git pull origin master sudo ./netdata-installer.sh ``` > **Note** > > If you installed Netdata with any optional parameters, such as `--install-prefix` to install under a specific directory, you need to set them again during this process. ## Additional info ### Control runtime behavior of the updater script Starting with v1.40.0, the `netdata-updater.sh` script supports a config file called `netdata-updater.conf`, located in the same directory as the main `netdata.conf` file. This file uses POSIX shell script syntax to define variables that are used by the updater. This configuration file can be edited using our [`edit-config` script](/docs/netdata-agent/configuration/README.md). The following configuration options are currently supported: - `NETDATA_UPDATER_JITTER`: Sets an upper limit in seconds on the random delay in the updater script when running as a scheduled task. This random delay helps avoid issues resulting from too many nodes trying to reconnect to the Cloud at the same time. The default value is 3600, which corresponds to one hour. Most users shouldn’t ever need to change this. - `NETDATA_MAJOR_VERSION_UPDATES`: If set to a value other than 0, then new major versions will be installed without user confirmation. Must be set to a non-zero value for automated updates to install new major versions. - `NETDATA_NO_SYSTEMD_JOURNAL`: If set to a value other than 0, skip attempting to install the `netdata-plugin-systemd-journal` package on supported systems on update. The updater will install this optional package by default on supported systems if this option is not set. It only affects systems using native packages.