brent it's an alias set up in the .bashrc
file, so it's no different than going to the terminal and typing out the command for say sudo eopkg up
. You just have to edit the file, I did sudo nano .bashrc
and added the alias. After it's set up, just open a terminal and run your alias, if it requires sudo privilege you have to enter your password too.
Pretty sure this is how I have it set up, I can verify later when I get home if you'd like.
alias updateall="sudo eopkg up -y && sudo eopkg bi --ignore-safety https://raw.githubusercontent.com/getsolus/3rd-party/master/network/web/browser/google-chrome-stable/pspec.xml && sudo eopkg it google-chrome-*.eopkg;sudo rm google-chrome-*.eopkg && flatpak update -y && sudo snap refresh"