Download, install and reboot computer at night if needed
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How can I write a script in Ubuntu such that it download updates at night when I sleep and reboots the computer if it needs a reboot?
ubuntu scripting upgrade reboot
New contributor
add a comment |
How can I write a script in Ubuntu such that it download updates at night when I sleep and reboots the computer if it needs a reboot?
ubuntu scripting upgrade reboot
New contributor
add a comment |
How can I write a script in Ubuntu such that it download updates at night when I sleep and reboots the computer if it needs a reboot?
ubuntu scripting upgrade reboot
New contributor
How can I write a script in Ubuntu such that it download updates at night when I sleep and reboots the computer if it needs a reboot?
ubuntu scripting upgrade reboot
ubuntu scripting upgrade reboot
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
Stephen Kitt
180k25411491
180k25411491
New contributor
asked yesterday
ubuntunoviceubuntunovice
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1 Answer
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You can do this by installing the unattended-upgrades
package; see its documentation for details of its configuration.
sudo apt install unattended-upgrades
will install it for you.
Installing it should be sufficient to enable it. To allow it to reboot when necessary, you’ll have to add a configuration file, e.g. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/52unattended-upgrades-local
, containing
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "yes";
By default, on Ubuntu, it will install any upgrade from the main repositories, whether it’s security-related or not. You can configure more repositories if necessary by overriding the Unattended-Upgrade::Allowed-Origins
configuration key.
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS'syum-cron
)?
– Ned64
yesterday
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks inapt
itself.
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.
– Seamus
yesterday
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives wherereboot-required
isn’t generated?
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can do this by installing the unattended-upgrades
package; see its documentation for details of its configuration.
sudo apt install unattended-upgrades
will install it for you.
Installing it should be sufficient to enable it. To allow it to reboot when necessary, you’ll have to add a configuration file, e.g. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/52unattended-upgrades-local
, containing
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "yes";
By default, on Ubuntu, it will install any upgrade from the main repositories, whether it’s security-related or not. You can configure more repositories if necessary by overriding the Unattended-Upgrade::Allowed-Origins
configuration key.
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS'syum-cron
)?
– Ned64
yesterday
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks inapt
itself.
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.
– Seamus
yesterday
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives wherereboot-required
isn’t generated?
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
You can do this by installing the unattended-upgrades
package; see its documentation for details of its configuration.
sudo apt install unattended-upgrades
will install it for you.
Installing it should be sufficient to enable it. To allow it to reboot when necessary, you’ll have to add a configuration file, e.g. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/52unattended-upgrades-local
, containing
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "yes";
By default, on Ubuntu, it will install any upgrade from the main repositories, whether it’s security-related or not. You can configure more repositories if necessary by overriding the Unattended-Upgrade::Allowed-Origins
configuration key.
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS'syum-cron
)?
– Ned64
yesterday
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks inapt
itself.
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.
– Seamus
yesterday
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives wherereboot-required
isn’t generated?
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
You can do this by installing the unattended-upgrades
package; see its documentation for details of its configuration.
sudo apt install unattended-upgrades
will install it for you.
Installing it should be sufficient to enable it. To allow it to reboot when necessary, you’ll have to add a configuration file, e.g. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/52unattended-upgrades-local
, containing
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "yes";
By default, on Ubuntu, it will install any upgrade from the main repositories, whether it’s security-related or not. You can configure more repositories if necessary by overriding the Unattended-Upgrade::Allowed-Origins
configuration key.
You can do this by installing the unattended-upgrades
package; see its documentation for details of its configuration.
sudo apt install unattended-upgrades
will install it for you.
Installing it should be sufficient to enable it. To allow it to reboot when necessary, you’ll have to add a configuration file, e.g. /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/52unattended-upgrades-local
, containing
Unattended-Upgrade::Automatic-Reboot "yes";
By default, on Ubuntu, it will install any upgrade from the main repositories, whether it’s security-related or not. You can configure more repositories if necessary by overriding the Unattended-Upgrade::Allowed-Origins
configuration key.
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
Stephen KittStephen Kitt
180k25411491
180k25411491
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS'syum-cron
)?
– Ned64
yesterday
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks inapt
itself.
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.
– Seamus
yesterday
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives wherereboot-required
isn’t generated?
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS'syum-cron
)?
– Ned64
yesterday
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks inapt
itself.
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.
– Seamus
yesterday
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives wherereboot-required
isn’t generated?
– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS's
yum-cron
)?– Ned64
yesterday
How official is this software source? I would not recommend to any user to install something from another source than their OS's software repository. Perhaps Ubuntu has something built-in (like CentOS's
yum-cron
)?– Ned64
yesterday
6
6
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks in
apt
itself.– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
@Ned64 it’s available as a package in Debian and Ubuntu, and is written by a Ubuntu developer. It piggy-backs off hooks in
apt
itself.– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file
/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.– Seamus
yesterday
What do you suppose this package does if the file
/var/run/reboot-required
is never generated by the system? That is to say, some systems generate this file, others do not.– Seamus
yesterday
1
1
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives where
reboot-required
isn’t generated?– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
@Seamus are there Debian or Ubuntu derivatives where
reboot-required
isn’t generated?– Stephen Kitt
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
The only one I'm certain of is Raspbian (Raspberry Pi's default OS). Just out of curiosity - Isn't Ubuntu an "offspring" of Debian?
– Seamus
yesterday
|
show 7 more comments
ubuntunovice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ubuntunovice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ubuntunovice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
ubuntunovice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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