From Fedora Project Wiki
< Desktop | Whiteboards
Implementation tasklist for better update experience
See requirements and discussion at [Desktop/Whiteboards/UpdateExperience].
Fedora Process
* Enhancement (anything non-security) updates are scheduled for once a month
Running app (firefox) update (security and enhancement)
* Separate download process from install * Add functionality to yum to detect what packages are currently running (doable at high confidence for c/c++, e.g. scripted plugins are a hard case, ignore for now) * PackageKit daemon wraps said functionality * For running apps (apps, i.e. open X windows), show a dialog indicating they need to be closed (also, window manager adds (Update Available) or something to title) * On clicking "Apply", pk-update-icon sends a close request to all windows corresponding to that process it finds (in sequence?) (TODO: standard application dbus interface?) * When application is closed, packagekit starts updating that app (+ dependencies) * Application is restarted (pick first .desktop file in package? eww. require backporting GNOME Shell application tracker as dbus service?)
* Other notes: Should block application relaunch during updates too; show the user the updater dialog
Non-running application security updates
* Similar dialog as above, but without close button?
System updates (security and enhancement)
* All desktops are logged out, system switches to gdm (or plymouth?) * gdm shows updater screen * perform a "dependency reboot"; e.g. if kernel/init/dbus, do a full reboot. Otherwise, for system daemons do "service foo restart".
System security updates
* Similar to running app - if it's on the system it's implicitly running, basically. It's either a crucial library like glibc, a key system daemon like NetworkManager, or a general program like curl that we can't know reliably when it might run.
System non-security updates
* By default, apply automatically when safe (shutdown/reboot, configurable timeout (one week?)). Note availablity of updates at context switch time (screensaver, gdm). If configured to prompt, do so of course.