this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2024
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That is the behaviour that's built for when an upgrade through a "classic" package manager (e.g. apt, dnf) updates Firefox while it's still running. The only way I can think of that you'd get that with a snap is if you're intentionally bypassing the confinement (e.g. by running
/snap/firefox/current/usr/lib/firefox/firefox
directly, which can also massively mess with other things since Firefox won't be running in thecore22
environment it expects).If you're using the snap as expected (e.g. opening the
.desktop
file in/var/lib/snapd/desktop/applications/
, running/snap/bin/firefox
or runningsnap run firefox
), snapd won't replace/snap/firefox/current
until you no longer have any processes from that snap running. Instead you'll get a desktop notification to close and restart Firefox to update it, and two weeks to either do so or to runsnap refresh --hold firefox
to prevent the update (or something likesnap refresh --hold=6w firefox
to hold the refresh for 6 weeks). Depending on what graphical updater you have, you may also have the ability to hold the update through that updater.Are you sure you're running the Firefox snap? Because that sounds pretty much precisely like the expected behaviour if someone had gone to lengths to avoid using the snap.
I'm 99.999% sure it was, as it was within kubuntu using the default FF install (Canonical only provides the snapped version), and opened from either the taskbar icon or through its menu. Discover's auto-update feature was also manually turned off. (was a system at work, so I wanted the config to be relatively basic but controllable)
I did at some point completely remove snap and switched to flatpak. Eventually though, I went with the Mozilla Team's PPA, as the sandboxing was adding too many complications with the addons along with printing documents.