[Bug 1615482] Re: apt-daily timer runs at random hours of the day

Haw Loeung 1615482 at bugs.launchpad.net
Tue Apr 25 08:03:01 UTC 2017


I mean, 1hr is better than the 30min window previously. But since you're
there poking around that bit of code, think we can increase that further
to 2hrs (0500 - 0700)? :D

Also, think we can get the window increase in unattended-upgrades for
older distros (Trusty etc.)?

Thanks for your time!

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Title:
  apt-daily timer runs at random hours of the day

Status in apt package in Ubuntu:
  Fix Committed

Bug description:
  apt, from 1.2.10 onwards (ie any version in Xenial, onwards) uses a
  systemd timer instead of a cron.daily job. This is a good thing,
  decoupling apt daily runs from the rest of cron, and ensuring other
  cron.daily jobs are not blocked by up to half an hour by the default
  settings of unattended-upgrades.

  However the policy chosen is to have the apt daily script run at a
  random hour of the day in a wrong headed attempt to reduce server
  load. This has the side effect of running unattended-upgrades at
  random hours of the day — such as business hours — rather than being
  confined to between 6:25am and 6:55am, using the defaults.

  A better policy would be to have the script activate at 6:00am plus an
  interval of 20 minutes at one second intervals reducing the impact of
  timezone population spikes, while still allowing unattended-upgrades
  to run within a predictable interval, before 7am.

  At the very least, some sort of note in the NEWS file detailing the
  new behaviour would be welcome.

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