Fellow Fedora Immutable users, have any of you automated your system updates to occur at shutdown? If so, do you find it makes a practical difference?
I’m thinking of doing the same with Tony Walker’s silverblue-update service.
I shutdown most of my machines daily, and that often means getting an updated image shortly after startup the next day and being forced to reboot or nearly always remain one day behind in updates. By checking for updates again at shutdown, this should help ensure I’ve always got the latest daily image at boot. Thoughts?
I use uBlue and update manually (using a custom alias/script) whenever I get the time, like say during my lunch break or something. Reason being, I actually like watching the update process and seeing what gets updated, watching out for major version number changes or major package upgrades, and if I’m interested I may look up some of their changelogs to find out about their new features etc.
You should be forced to reboot though? And if you don’t want to reboot, can’t you just do an
--apply-live
? I mean you’d still need to reboot for a kernel update but for the most part, you should be able to use most of your new packages without a reboot. And this holds true even more so if you’re updating Flatpak/container/Nix/pip/cargo/brew packages. And I hope you’re not doing the rookie mistake of actually installing stuff at the ostree layer instead of using Flatpaks/containers/Nix etc.I too like to review changes between images, but I’m just as content to run
rpm-ostree status
and/orrpm-ostree db diff
to see what exactly has changed.I’m hoping to eliminate the extra reboot each day that is usually necessary to activate the latest image. I know that a lot of this will depend on exactly when the image drops from the repos (versus when I shutdown a host), which is why I was looking for some general feedback from others who might have done the same thing…I didn’t know if it’d be worthwhile in the long run, but I guess there’s only one way to find out. As for the
--apply-live
, I use it on occasion but I don’t want to rely on it for system updates (if that’s even possible).As I said before, it does work for system updates, the only exception being the kernel. The
--apply-live
flag was added for that exact reason, to avoid the need for an unnecessary reboot.