Hello,
On Tue, Feb 08, 2022 at 02:25:35PM -0500, Lee wrote:
> Apparently the syslog message
> systemd[1]: Starting Daily apt upgrade and clean activities...
> is caused by systemd / apt-daily.timer - correct?
No, that one is from apt-daily-upgrade.timer:
$ grep -r "upgrade a
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
> My personal preference is to have upgrade packages downloaded
> automatically but not installed,
I think apticron does that for me. And it tells me that everything's up to
date if it is. I do an 'apt update' to be sure I have the latest news,
On Tue 08 Feb 2022 at 14:25:35 (-0500), Lee wrote:
> Apparently the syslog message
> systemd[1]: Starting Daily apt upgrade and clean activities...
> is caused by systemd / apt-daily.timer - correct?
>
> # sudo systemctl status apt-daily.timer
> ● apt-daily.timer - Daily apt d
Lee wrote:
> Apparently the syslog message
> systemd[1]: Starting Daily apt upgrade and clean activities...
> is caused by systemd / apt-daily.timer - correct?
>
> # sudo systemctl status apt-daily.timer
> ● apt-daily.timer - Daily apt download activities
> Loaded:
On Tue, Feb 08, 2022 at 02:25:35PM -0500, Lee wrote:
> Apparently the syslog message
> systemd[1]: Starting Daily apt upgrade and clean activities...
> is caused by systemd / apt-daily.timer - correct?
>
> # sudo systemctl status apt-daily.timer
> ● apt-daily.timer -
Apparently the syslog message
systemd[1]: Starting Daily apt upgrade and clean activities...
is caused by systemd / apt-daily.timer - correct?
# sudo systemctl status apt-daily.timer
● apt-daily.timer - Daily apt download activities
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/apt-daily.timer
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