On 12/15/2017 12:12 AM, Tim wrote:
Tim:
It's not always necessary, but worth remembering that if things
behave oddly after software updates you may have to:

a. Log out and back in again.
b. Or, reboot.

It depends on what was in the set of updates.

Having said the above, I rarely have to do that.


Samuel Sieb:
And this is exactly why the default is to do offline updates.

Which, would mean, in my case, and many others, that updates wouldn't
get done.  And I intensely dislike the lazy approach of "we'll just
make you reboot," rather than work out how to do an update that doesn't
needed it.  This isn't Windows.


I think you missed my point. For a typical user, they won't understand why things are acting strangely. That's why it's the default to do offline updates. It doesn't stop you from doing them live. I do that, but then I also usually reboot as well at a convenient time because there's usually a new kernel in the updates.

If you want to figure out how do updates without requiring a reboot then go for it! No one else thinks it's worth their time to solve it because most people don't think it's a problem and the ones that understand it realize how hard it is to solve if it's even possible.
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