this post was submitted on 19 Mar 2026
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I'm a very new Linux user running Fedora with KDE, as of a few weeks ago.

I have some super basic questions about updates through Discover.

Background: There are new updates available nearly every day. The list of updates can get very long and is a text-based list, including many undecipherable things. Unless I were to search for each and every one.

For example, today's update list includes the following entries:

cups
Upgrade to new version 1:2.4.16-7.fc43
Release notes:
fix cupsd endless loop on busy servers (fedora#2446938)
cups-client
Upgrade to new version 1:2.4.16-7.fc43
Release notes:
fix cupsd endless loop on busy servers (fedora#2446938)
cups-filesystem
Upgrade to new version 1:2.4.16-7.fc43
Release notes:
fix cupsd endless loop on busy servers (fedora#2446938)
libtasn1
Upgrade to new version 4.21.0-1.fc43
Release notes:
Update to 4.21.0; fixes CVE-2025-13151
vim-minimal
Upgrade to new version 2:9.2.148-1.fc43
Release notes:
patchlevel 148 
Security fix for CVE-2026-32249
zlib-ng-compat
Upgrade to new version 2.3.3-2.fc43
Release notes:
Fix RISC-V build

Yes, I could look up what these are, but that seems impractical given that each day there are dozens of updates and I really don't want to spend the time on this.

So onto my questions:

  1. Should I just run all these updates as they come up? Do you all run these updates as they pop up?

  2. Are you all getting this many updates on Fedora or is it something specific to me and the apps I'm running? I installed Fedora as-is and installed maybe 10 additional applications. So I shouldn't have anything super custom. Computer is a 5 year old ASUS laptop with AMD.

  3. Is there a way to de-select some updates if I don't want to run all of them?

  4. Should I ignore daily updates and install them less frequently, say monthly? Meaning, I'm not super interested in being the glitch finder. If there's a bug in an update, I'd rather have somebody else find it first and have the update patched.

General Fedora feedback: the discover update app feels lacking here. As a new user, I expect more of a description about what each application/service is as well as a clickable link to read more about the app and the update.

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[–] atomicStan@programming.dev 3 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

Should I just run all these updates as they come up?

For best practices related to security, yes.

Do you all run these updates as they pop up?

I'm on a Fedora-derivative that does automatic updates in the background. It applies those at least once a day.

Are you all getting this many updates on Fedora

Yes. This is standard procedure on all (semi-)rolling release distros.

or is it something specific to me and the apps I’m running?

Nah.

Is there a way to de-select some updates if I don’t want to run all of them?

I believe it's possible. But this Fedora maintainer mentions the following (and I quote):

"Fedora is a major-version stable system, which means that it isn't guaranteed safe to cherry-pick updates. The only reliable state for a major-version stable system is "fully updated". While rpm can detect major-version changes in dependencies, it doesn't detect minor-version changes in dependencies. That means that a package that you cherry-pick might appear to have all of its dependencies met from rpm's point of view, but it might crash at runtime because those dependencies don't have features that are required by the application."

Should I ignore daily updates

It's your PC. You do you. I would personally advise against it.

and install them less frequently, say monthly?

I have noticed that updating once every couple of days is relatively standard. I suppose it's 'fine'~ish as long as it doesn't exceed two weeks. But monthly would definitely be stretching it. At that point..., perhaps considering a distro with a slower release cadence makes more sense.

Meaning, I’m not super interested in being the glitch finder. If there’s a bug in an update, I’d rather have somebody else find it first and have the update patched.

So..., if that's what this is all about, then the following is worth noting:

  • On Fedora, there's the so-called Rawhide branch. This is basically their unstable branch and where most of the actual testing happens. You'll (mostly) only receive updates that have already been tested in Rawhide. So, bugs/glitches and whatnot are pretty rare.
  • But, if this is still your concern, then perhaps you should consider a distro with a slow release cadence. Which, basically comes down to picking one between Debian (on the Stable branch), openSUSE Leap and Ubuntu.
[–] hard_zero1@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 13 hours ago (1 children)
  1. I usually do the updates in the evening when turning off my laptop. I click "update all" (or so) and then choose "shut down" in the selection that appears at the bottom. Then I can leave the laptop and it will automatically reboot to install the updates and then shut down completely.
  2. Yes, that number of updates is normal
  3. I don't know of a way to (un)select specific "system"-packages within Discover
  4. The updates are usually fine. I can't think of any case where a routine update caused trouble for me. I prefer getting the security updates (and other improvements) quickly. Just once, I intentionally delayed the updates for a few days before an important deadline, where I needed my computer to work and wouldn't have had the time to deal with issues
[–] corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca 1 points 12 hours ago

I can't think of any case where a routine update caused trouble for me.

I second this.

Since about 2002, I've had a growing number of machines (ent Linux, similar to fedora) who simply patch nightly via cron. I get mail on the changes. In 24 years of yum-cron I've seen one error (busted deps on cobbler) and caused one error (too-old smb.conf during an update) and that's it.

So, my fuck-up aside, the only issue I've seen with a yum-cron patching setup (in dev/test and homeland) in ~25 years is exactly one issue on boxes running a mainstream but not prevalent piece of software due to a packaging glitch. That's it.

[–] Strit@lemmy.linuxuserspace.show 9 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

General Fedora feedback: the discover update app feels lacking here. As a new user, I expect more of a description about what each application/service is as well as a clickable link to read more about the app and the update.

That's because Discover handles 3 types of updates.

  1. Applications from a "Store". These are the ones you are expecting with descriptions and such.
  2. Packages from the repository of the distro. These are the ones you have listed. They are "technical" package names, not limited to applications. Can also be libraries, dependencies and system stuff.
  3. Firmware. If you have enabled the Linux Firmware option in Discover, you will get presented with special firmware packages.
[–] ryrybang@lemmy.world 2 points 17 hours ago
[–] linuxguy@piefed.ca 8 points 21 hours ago (1 children)
  1. Nah. Set the frequency to weekly or monthly or something you don't need to do daily. I do monthly.
  2. Yeah, there's a lot of updates and that's a good thing
  3. Probably
  4. Yes
[–] ryrybang@lemmy.world 2 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks! I'll figure out how to set it to check monthly.

[–] linuxguy@piefed.ca 3 points 17 hours ago

Settings -> Software Update or something like that. You can also set it to auto-apply. Mostly, I ignore the popup and run dnf update -y && snap refresh && flatpak update -y as root every once in a while when I think about it.