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Any way to stop Windows auto-corrupt
Officially known as automatic update installation?
I have nothing against updates--I have quite a beef with it forcefully shutting down VMWare. I still don't have one of my virtual machines back. |
In all the versions of Windows I've used, they give you options, like 'install automatically' (which I don't use) and 'download but let me decide when to install", which I do use.
Is this what you're asking? |
There are also an option to stop immediate reboots... under the advanced options part of windows update. I generally update within a day or two of Patch Tuesday so that option combined with active hours works for me.
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Originally Posted by StuckInYYZ
(Post 33652578)
There are also an option to stop immediate reboots... under the advanced options part of windows update. I generally update within a day or two of Patch Tuesday so that option combined with active hours works for me.
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Originally Posted by Loren Pechtel
(Post 33652826)
This was outside active hours--it's just some programs don't take kindly to being forced to shut down.
Me: Did you enable the notification before reboot function? Him: No Me: Did you set up active hours? Him: No Me: Did you set up a calendar event to remind you every 2nd Tuesday of the month to at least give you some warning? Him: No Me: So after I have been reminding you to do it all these years, why haven't you? (I don't remind him it's patch Tuesday, just remind him to set these tasks up every time he complains) Him: Too time consuming. Me: So spend hour(s) every month remembering what changes you've made that might not have been committed instead of the 3-5 minutes once to mitigate the problem... I usually don't hear from him for a week after while he fumes. |
Recent versions of Windows 10 (and now 11) have a pause updates feature that lets you prevent Windows Update for a period of time.
You could also write a script that checks if a pending reboot is detected, do a clean shutdown of your VM and execute the reboot. See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/...pending-reboot |
Upgrade to Pro, if memory serves, Pro allows complete control over updates?
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Originally Posted by COSPILOT
(Post 33654795)
Upgrade to Pro, if memory serves, Pro allows complete control over updates?
1) Some people don't save their work (not the OP in this case) and then complain when the system reboots... 2) Some people have systems that require controlled reboots (this is where the OP fits in my opinion). 3) Some people are just lazy and don't want to have to do certain tasks (eg, another person I know constantly has 20 tabs open in their web browser and doesn't like recreating them even if their system is performing poorly). I often tell people... doesn't matter what you use, at one point ALL systems need a reboot (yes, Mac and Linux systems too). Mitigate it and you should be fine. My devops friend for example... doesn't take my advice and then complains when it happens. I rarely lose data to patching (maybe once when I forgot to set up the notify before reboot). I used to run my personal VMs on Windows but having to worry about patching, it made more sense to rebuild the boxes on a linux system... and at one point, I'm going to go to an L1 hypervisor (like XCP-ng or Proxmox). |
Originally Posted by StuckInYYZ
(Post 33655012)
1) Some people don't save their work (not the OP in this case) and then complain when the system reboots...
2) Some people have systems that require controlled reboots (this is where the OP fits in my opinion). 3) Some people are just lazy and don't want to have to do certain tasks (eg, another person I know constantly has 20 tabs open in their web browser and doesn't like recreating them even if their system is performing poorly). I often tell people... doesn't matter what you use, at one point ALL systems need a reboot (yes, Mac and Linux systems too). Mitigate it and you should be fine. My devops friend for example... doesn't take my advice and then complains when it happens. I rarely lose data to patching (maybe once when I forgot to set up the notify before reboot). I used to run my personal VMs on Windows but having to worry about patching, it made more sense to rebuild the boxes on a linux system... and at one point, I'm going to go to an L1 hypervisor (like XCP-ng or Proxmox). |
Originally Posted by Loren Pechtel
(Post 33655946)
I do agree--if it's got a processor it will need a reboot someday. (My wackiest one to date: a pair of routers connecting the networks between two cities--this before the days of VPNs. Reset one--not fixed. Reset the other--not fixed. We finally figured out that they were corrupting each other, they had to be shut down at the same time, then brought back up.) I don't mind loading updates, I do mind the surprise reboots. There's half a dozen things that have to be shut down manually to save state data.) I wouldn't mind if once the time limit is up that restart simply loaded the update. (Shutdown is another matter--on laptop systems Windows will know if it's on battery, but on desktops it won't know it's on UPS.)
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Originally Posted by cblaisd
(Post 33657268)
https://www.wikihow.com/Turn-Off-Aut...-in-Windows-10
https://www.windowscentral.com/how-s...lly-windows-10 |
To the OP: Build a PiHole for your network, block all of the Microsoft update servers, and enjoy life. If Windows can't download the updates, it can't update. If it can't update, it doesn't reboot.
Originally Posted by StuckInYYZ
(Post 33655012)
I often tell people... doesn't matter what you use, at one point ALL systems need a reboot (yes, Mac and Linux systems too).
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Originally Posted by KRSW
(Post 33751753)
Bite your tongue. I certainly have to reboot my Mac 2-3x a year. My Linux and BSD systems? Nope.
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Originally Posted by KRSW
(Post 33751753)
To the OP: Build a PiHole for your network, block all of the Microsoft update servers, and enjoy life. If Windows can't download the updates, it can't update. If it can't update, it doesn't reboot.
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