Thanks claydoh
I am not sure I am following what you meant by the implication of this being an "older system". Do you mean that the way the updater works differs depending on hardware? Or the fact that my efforts to disable the updater may not apply because it is older hardware? I guess I assumed the software would be the same on any system at the level of the GUI or command line. I don't understand why turning things off doesn't actually turn them off, which makes me wonder if there are other things that trigger the updater that I haven't found yet?
A process called "kde5", part of "kedinit5", seems to start just before "update-apt-xapi". Maybe that is useful info?
As you suggest, I am hoping there may be someone else on the forum with the knowledge of older systems, or the update processes specifically, who could tell me where else to look, or how else to go about disabling the updating system?
If there isn't, I guess I will have to put up with the fact that the machine is practically unusable for the first 10 minutes after each reboot, all because it is doing something I don't want it to do, and I have told it not to do, but it won't take no for an answer!
Even with the above settings in Discover telling it not to update, just bringing it up starts a check for updates, without any action from me. Surely this is not normal behaviour for the updater? If it is, why have a "Check for Updates" button? Another strange thing is that I just have to move the mouse over part of the Discover screen to have the "plasma-discover" process cpu jump up to 50% again for a few seconds. This does not happen with pointer movement over other windows. Maybe there is a fault with the Discover module? Also, I notice a number of entries under CPU% column saying "unknown". I have never actually noticed that in other system monitors before.
I notice in the list of sources on the front, it says I have PackageKit backend installed, but not Flatpack or Snap backends. PackageKit is one of the processes that comes up with the updating; do I need it? There is an option to uninstall it.
I am not sure I am following what you meant by the implication of this being an "older system". Do you mean that the way the updater works differs depending on hardware? Or the fact that my efforts to disable the updater may not apply because it is older hardware? I guess I assumed the software would be the same on any system at the level of the GUI or command line. I don't understand why turning things off doesn't actually turn them off, which makes me wonder if there are other things that trigger the updater that I haven't found yet?
A process called "kde5", part of "kedinit5", seems to start just before "update-apt-xapi". Maybe that is useful info?
As you suggest, I am hoping there may be someone else on the forum with the knowledge of older systems, or the update processes specifically, who could tell me where else to look, or how else to go about disabling the updating system?
If there isn't, I guess I will have to put up with the fact that the machine is practically unusable for the first 10 minutes after each reboot, all because it is doing something I don't want it to do, and I have told it not to do, but it won't take no for an answer!
Even with the above settings in Discover telling it not to update, just bringing it up starts a check for updates, without any action from me. Surely this is not normal behaviour for the updater? If it is, why have a "Check for Updates" button? Another strange thing is that I just have to move the mouse over part of the Discover screen to have the "plasma-discover" process cpu jump up to 50% again for a few seconds. This does not happen with pointer movement over other windows. Maybe there is a fault with the Discover module? Also, I notice a number of entries under CPU% column saying "unknown". I have never actually noticed that in other system monitors before.
I notice in the list of sources on the front, it says I have PackageKit backend installed, but not Flatpack or Snap backends. PackageKit is one of the processes that comes up with the updating; do I need it? There is an option to uninstall it.
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