You're quite right mpt. Not sure what possessed me to file this in UX. the linked bug I raised it from even seems clear on the matter.
To be double sure, I just tried it on #201, and observed that when an update has been downloaded (but you have not pressed the offered 'install' button), if you reboot into recovery, the update is applied anyway. That's just a bug in system settings or the system updater. will refile appropriately. ** Also affects: ubuntu-system-settings (Ubuntu) Importance: Undecided Status: New ** Also affects: system-image (Ubuntu) Importance: Undecided Status: New ** Changed in: ubuntu-ux Status: Incomplete => Invalid -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to system-image in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1403463 Title: System Updates should not always be automatic Status in the base for Ubuntu mobile products: Incomplete Status in Ubuntu UX bugs: Invalid Status in system-image package in Ubuntu: New Status in ubuntu-system-settings package in Ubuntu: New Bug description: Currently, the update process on a phone image is two stages - download the update, and then reboot to a maintenance mode (recovery) to install the update. A final reboot brings the phone back up in the updated form. The UI treats this as one operation, and once started, the update cannot be stopped. This causes specific problems when an update has downloaded, and (for unrelated reasons) a reboot is needed to recovery. At this point, the phone will always try to apply any pending update. Sometimes this is the exact opposite of what the user needs. The user may be aware of problems with the device, and be rebooting into recovery to perform other maintenance tasks. It is possible that applying an update will make matters worse, and will certainly inconvenience the user, who will wish to do maintenance, not wait for an update to occur. The biggest class of users this will impact is developers, who will often wish to reboot to recovery for image maintenance tasks, and who may not have elected to entirely disable automatic updates. The other important use case is users with machines exhibiting problematic symptoms who are working with support personnel. Those users have no way to be sure that a reboot to recovery will not trigger an invasive update to the system. This bug is to request user interface that allows the user to express the notion 'please don't install any downloaded update on the next reboot'. To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/canonical-devices-system-image/+bug/1403463/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp