Once APT implements origin tracking this should no longer be a problem,
or it might be; generally speaking the idea is that if you install a
package from one archive, APT doesn't switch it. You can also configure
rules of `o=Ubuntu -> o=UbuntuESM` to allow transitions between
archives.
However one
As explained before, the behavior here is intended and not a bug.
@Jan You are free to configure unattended-upgrades to install from the
PPA or add negative pins for the Ubuntu (and UbuntuESM archives, if
enabled) for src:firefox to prevent the snap from being installed.
@Piotr I will not corresp
Upstream issue predating this report:
https://github.com/mvo5/unattended-upgrades/issues/319
** Bug watch added: github.com/mvo5/unattended-upgrades/issues #319
https://github.com/mvo5/unattended-upgrades/issues/319
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2033646
Title:
unattended-upgrade ignores apt-pinning to not-allowed origins
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@juliank
I think you missed the point of this bug report and its grave status for
"unattended-upgrades".
This bug happens even when there is *no* "intermediate" update available in the
Ubuntu repository (allowed-origin).
When there is an *UPDATE AVAILABLE IN AN EXTERNAL REPOSITORY*
(not-allowed
@juliank - the whole point of using the Firefox package repo is to get
timely security updates, which are regrettably impossible with Ubuntu's
current snap-based implementation.
Perhaps this should be reassigned as an issue for whatever reinstalls
the firefox transitional package, which should not
I think this is more a misunderstanding here, but the "workaround" is
the right solution for this issue.
Specifically, unattended-upgrades is exactly designed to give you less
preferable upgrades because the others are reserved for manual upgrades
(i.e. -security vs -updates). That is, the securit