I just installed Kubuntu 20.04 on a test machine, and was booting it after the install.
It was working fine, but when I went to try to install new packages, and update the 400+ updates with synaptic, it gave me the "locked by another process" warning.
I waited a few minutes and tried the taskbar updater, and that also said, "locked by another process"
I did apt-get updates, and that worked, so I wasn't sure what the issues was.
Finally realized that unattended-updates is a thing now, and tried to kill it, etc, finally sudo rm lock to get me control of MY machine back.
Did my updates (all 400+ updates were still marked in synaptic, so no idea what unattended-updates was trying to do.)
Nuked unattended-updates from my machine, did some work. Of course a kernel update was installed, so did a reboot. The actual update with synaptic took about 5 minutes, which is way less than the time I waited for unattended updates to actually try to finish.
Upon shutting down, the computer actually said "Installing updates, do not turn off your computer." What? Not cool! I waited a little while, but finally nuked that as well with the power button, because I want to use MY computer.
Unattended-updates is way too window-esque for me, and I hate it. I want to control the updates myself, I want to know what the updates are, and what the status is. None of that is possible with unattended-updates.
Some suggestions:
1) put a check box on the installer for installing or not installing unattended-update packages. If I wanted to hand total control of my pc over to somebody else, I would use blasted windows. I don't care if it is enabled or not by default, I just want control.
2) put a slide screen on the install that "unattended updates" is a thing, and an instruction of how to remove it.
3) if, by all that is holy, unattended updates actually MUST be installed (for some bizarre reason), provide an informational widget and window that shows the status and what is being updates. What happens if unattended updates hangs? (which is what I suspect with my machine) How long do I lose the ability to update and INSTALL packages? Not having any indication that a major process is running is a huge flaw for me.
Unattended updates in the present form is a completely hidden package - there is no way to figure out what is happening and how it is running. Only by nuking it from the machine after install does the update process work properly, with information and status.
It was working fine, but when I went to try to install new packages, and update the 400+ updates with synaptic, it gave me the "locked by another process" warning.
I waited a few minutes and tried the taskbar updater, and that also said, "locked by another process"
I did apt-get updates, and that worked, so I wasn't sure what the issues was.
Finally realized that unattended-updates is a thing now, and tried to kill it, etc, finally sudo rm lock to get me control of MY machine back.
Did my updates (all 400+ updates were still marked in synaptic, so no idea what unattended-updates was trying to do.)
Nuked unattended-updates from my machine, did some work. Of course a kernel update was installed, so did a reboot. The actual update with synaptic took about 5 minutes, which is way less than the time I waited for unattended updates to actually try to finish.
Upon shutting down, the computer actually said "Installing updates, do not turn off your computer." What? Not cool! I waited a little while, but finally nuked that as well with the power button, because I want to use MY computer.
Unattended-updates is way too window-esque for me, and I hate it. I want to control the updates myself, I want to know what the updates are, and what the status is. None of that is possible with unattended-updates.
Some suggestions:
1) put a check box on the installer for installing or not installing unattended-update packages. If I wanted to hand total control of my pc over to somebody else, I would use blasted windows. I don't care if it is enabled or not by default, I just want control.
2) put a slide screen on the install that "unattended updates" is a thing, and an instruction of how to remove it.
3) if, by all that is holy, unattended updates actually MUST be installed (for some bizarre reason), provide an informational widget and window that shows the status and what is being updates. What happens if unattended updates hangs? (which is what I suspect with my machine) How long do I lose the ability to update and INSTALL packages? Not having any indication that a major process is running is a huge flaw for me.
Unattended updates in the present form is a completely hidden package - there is no way to figure out what is happening and how it is running. Only by nuking it from the machine after install does the update process work properly, with information and status.
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