Score:0

Scanning processes... takes ages on my pc (10+ minutes). How stop that?

uz flag

Scanning processes... takes ages on my pc (10+ minutes). How stop it from doing this?

This happen every time that I call apt remove, apt purge or apt install and related commands.

Is it safe to press ctrl+C?

Processing triggers for man-db (2.9.4-2) ...
(Ανάγνωση βάσης δεδομένων ... 565371 files and directories currently installed.)
Purging configuration files for docker-ce (5:20.10.12~3-0~debian-bullseye) ...
Processing triggers for ureadahead (0.100.0-21) ...
Scanning processes...                                                                  
Scanning candidates...  [================================================                                   ] (10+ minutes takes)
David avatar
cn flag
How about some context. When does this appear? After what commands or actions? Your question could use some more details.
Elias Estatistics avatar
uz flag
`sudo apt-get --purge remove os-prober` removed that process.
mchid avatar
bo flag
I do not believe it is safe to CTRL+C when running apt. There are many reasons why. One is the lockfile. There are other reasons that I can think of but I'd have to look into them to be sure.
Score:0
uz flag

sudo apt-get --purge remove os-prober removed that process. Thankfully!

David avatar
cn flag
Pretty sure it was a bad idea to kill that off.
mchid avatar
bo flag
@David It's complicated. On most systems, it's only used on the initial installation. It becomes a problem if you decide to install an additional OS to your system. If it's a linux based OS, the new install should have the updated OS list and bootloader (e.g. grub or lilo). On newer versions of Ubuntu (22.04) os-prober is actually disabled in Grub by default and must be enabled for it to work. I guess that, if you need to use it in the future, you could always reinstall it and uninstall it after updating Grub.
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