I installed a Sparky MATE system onto an SSD connected via USB. I've installed quite a few Linux distributions this way. When it was finished, I rebooted. The update tool started. It asked if I wanted to update. I said yes, it displayed a terminal, and then displayed the "recomputing packages" (or whatever that language is). This was a bad sign, as that only is supposed to appear after the update is finished. Then the entire process restarted. Then the entire process restarted. Then I killed that dialog because clearly it was in an infinite loop. I rebooted -- and the same thing happened. So I did things manually -- "apt update" and "apt upgrade" in a terminal. Seems like a bug to me. Is there a way to disable the auto-update process to stop the infinite loop?
In case it matters, the hardware is Intel 3rd Generation Core processor and 8 GB memory.
Also, the below is a part of the messages from "apt upgrade": is the syntax error important?
Setting up python3 (3.9.1-1) ...
running python rtupdate hooks for python3.9...
/usr/share/bleachbit/bleachbit/__init__.py:260: SyntaxWarning: "is not" with a l
iteral. Did you mean "!="?
if msgctxt is not None and msgctxt is not "":
running python post-rtupdate hooks for python3.9...
The updater loops if a problem of a package version.
Package of exaile breaks it, so finishing upgrade manually can fix it.
And don't worry about bleachbit.
@pavroo
Okay, thanks for the reply. After updating manually, the loop is broken.
It keeps happening. I wish someone would tell me how to disable the autoupdate.
Simply run:
sudo apt update
sudo apt full-upgrade
Except that the auto-update starts before I can execute any terminal commands, hence my request.
When the grub2 boot options show, do the repair option, Ctl-D, which will put you into a TTY and the use the above commands from the TTY-terminal like. Any other problems in install possibly also "sudo dpkg --configure -a" but probably not needed.