Issue
I am running Debian Linux 9 (Stretch) with a 4.9 kernel, and I notice periodically the system launches an apt-config
process with user _apt
that uses 100% CPU and consumes enough resources that I can't mount or unmount volumes, much less use desktop functions (in my case KDE Plasma).
I thought this might be due to the installation of the unattended-upgrades package that is now installed by default as described on the Debian wiki, but following the procedure to disable with the command sudo dpkg-reconfigure -plow unattended-upgrades
did not help.
I see no similar resource consumption issues when I open a console and use aptitude
or dselect
, or if I use Discover
, even though these programs will also open an apt-config
process with user _apt
that uses 100% CPU.
How should I approach this problem?
Solution
This is debian bug #881787. Packagekit is checking for updates every 5-10 minutes on a Stretch KDE system. You can see this in systemctl status packagekit
.
The packagekit logs also show how long the checks take. On my system they took over 500 seconds and so were running basically constantly.
The apper
package may be responsible.
I had this package installed. I uninstalled it and have now successfully gone a whole 30 minutes without any new entries appearing in the packagekit logs. So that solved it for me!
Answered By - mappu Answer Checked By - David Marino (WPSolving Volunteer)