Add a script to restart fixes during the package upgrade #2
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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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post_upgrade() {
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post_upgrade() {
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kill $(ps aux | grep '[f]ix-flatpaks-theming\|[f]ix-theming\|[f]ix-tweaked-desktop-files' | awk '{print $2}')
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killall -r 'fix-(flatpaks-theming|theming|tweaked-desktop-files)'
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fix-tweaked-desktop-files &
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sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-tweaked-desktop-files
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fix-theming &
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sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-theming
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fix-flatpaks-theming &
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sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-flatpaks-theming
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eSh marked this conversation as resolved
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rokosun
commented
If the scripts don't work running as root then try running it like this:
Maybe it creates a sub-process under pacman and that causes some issues, so in that case its good to try this one too:
If the scripts don't work running as root then try running it like this:
```bash
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" fix-tweaked-desktop-files &
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" fix-theming &
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" fix-flatpaks-theming &
```
Maybe it creates a sub-process under pacman and that causes some issues, so in that case its good to try this one too:
```bash
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-tweaked-desktop-files
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-theming
sudo -u "$SUDO_USER" setsid -f fix-flatpaks-theming
```
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}
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}
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Here it might be better to use this command instead: