| Summary: | wish: add suspend to the options for automatic action after update | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | [Applications] Discover | Reporter: | Aaron Wolf <wolftune> |
| Component: | discover | Assignee: | Plasma Bugs List <plasma-bugs-null> |
| Status: | NEEDSINFO WAITINGFORINFO | ||
| Severity: | wishlist | CC: | aleixpol, nate |
| Priority: | NOR | ||
| Version First Reported In: | unspecified | ||
| Target Milestone: | --- | ||
| Platform: | unspecified | ||
| OS: | Linux | ||
| Latest Commit: | Version Fixed/Implemented In: | ||
| Sentry Crash Report: | |||
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Description
Aaron Wolf
2025-12-19 07:33:31 UTC
Probably doable. Can you explain your use case for this, though? What would be the circumstance under which you'd want to do this, and where you would specifically *not* want to shut down or reboot? Well, I find myself in situations where I'm in the middle of some work but taking a break or even turning in for the night. I see the updates and decide to run them as part of somewhat wrapping up. And then I realize that I need to be done for now, but I don't want the whole system to be off or restart, I want to suspend — but I don't want to suspend in the middle of the update, I'd rather let it finish, but I just want to suspend really. So, that's when I'd use this function. I'd then restart some later occassion when I've otherwise closed my open tasks and processes I had going. |