How to update the Azure CLI
You can rely on package managers to update a local install of the Azure CLI on Windows, macOS and Linux environments (see the Update
section in each platform-specific install instruction). The CLI also provides in-tool commands to upgrade manually or automatically.
Manual Update
Beginning with version 2.11.0, the Azure CLI provides an in-tool command to update to the latest version.
az upgrade
This command also updates all installed extensions by default. For more az upgrade
options, see the command reference page. For Azure CLI versions prior to 2.11.0, update by reinstalling as described in Install the Azure CLI.
az upgrade
is supported on Windows, macOS and some Linux distros as long as installation is supported. It only supports upgrading to the latest version. If you're running the Azure CLI through Azure Cloud Shell, you're most likely already using the most recent Azure CLI install. If not due to cases like ad-hoc release of a minor bug fix version, you need to wait for the next build of Azure Cloud Shell as az upgrade
isn't supported in Azure Cloud Shell.
When azure-cli
is already the latest version, running az upgrade
checks and updates all installed extensions.
Automatic Update
By default, autoupgrade for Azure CLI is disabled. If you would like to keep up with the latest version, you can enable autoupgrade through configuration.
az config set auto-upgrade.enable=yes
The Azure CLI will check new versions regularly and prompt you to upgrade after any command finishes running once the update is available.
The prompt message and output messages during upgrade may interrupt your command result if it's assigned to some variable or in an automated flow. To avoid interruption, you can use the following configuration to allow the update to happen automatically without confirmation, and only show warnings and errors during the upgrade.
az config set auto-upgrade.prompt=no
By default, all installed extensions are also updated. You can disable extension update through configuration.
az config set auto-upgrade.all=no
Note
Please wait for az upgrade
to complete before proceeding to the next set of commands, else the new versions of the CLI (+extensions) may have breaking changes.
If you decide not to use the automatic update feature anymore for cases like keeping command scripts running stably, you can turn it off through configuration.
az config set auto-upgrade.enable=no
Azure CLI