On Tue, 4 Jun 2013 07:27:55 +0100
Stroller <strol...@stellar.eclipse.co.uk> wrote:

> 
> On 3 June 2013, at 23:30, Walter Dnes wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, Jun 04, 2013 at 12:02:27AM +0200, Sebastian Pipping wrote
> > 
> >> Does anyone know an app sitting in the systray sending/popping
> >> notifications when installed packages can be updated?
> > 
> >  I'm not aware of any.  That could be done under Gentoo, via scripting,
> > if someone is willing to put in the work.  You would need a background
> > process running "emerge --sync" *AS ROOT* on a daily basis, possibly a
> > cron job.  Then it would have to be followed by
> > 
> > emerge -pv --deep --update --changed-use @world > updates.txt
> 
> I think systray notifications are a bad idea, but I don't know that a daily 
> cron job is the answer.
> 
> Gentoo.org requests that one does not sync every 5 minutes. I think current 
> policy might allow 4 times per day, but the only statement I can find on the 
> website is from 2003, "Sync 1-2 times per day, maximum. … Analysis of rsync 
> logs show that a few discourteous users syncing 10, 15 or even 25 times per 
> day are using a disproportionate amount of rsync mirror resources."
> 
> IMO systray notifications are to tell the user about stuff that's happening 
> *right now* - incoming email or instant messages, tweets, buddies coming 
> online, new comments on your blog or new uploads from your favourite YouTube 
> channel. 
> 
> I think Portage might usefully use systray notifications to tell you that a 
> package has finished installing (so please read the update notes and restart 
> the web / mail server) or that package 11 of 20 has compiled, but I don't 
> think systray notifications should be used for something that happens 
> infrequently, say only once or twice a day.
> 
> I don't really see the benefit of systray notifications (over a daily email), 
> but if OP really wants that, I think it would be better to write a script 
> that checks the RSS feed of http://packages.gentoo.org (which I think puts 
> less strain on Gentoo infrastructure) and then parses the updates to see if 
> the package is actually installed on the system, before notifying the user. 
> This is probably a bit more work.
> 
> Stroller.
> 
> 
In the case of the using the RSS feed, just use a blasted reader that check it 
and includes tray notifications or simply set a firefox live bookmark

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