I’ll note again that Duplicati team does not package your duplicati. Let me refer to info for Arch.
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/duplicati-canary-bin
Now that duplicati-latest has been renamed to duplicati-canary-bin, how do I upgrade?
gets into a package renaming that possibly is causing confusion on top of your install confusion.
Getting in Canary at all was probably not what you wanted, and you should also try solving that.
Unless, of course, you prefer the latest and greatest-except-for-possible-accidental-regressions.
Do you know what you were running before? Did you switch your OS? In Nov 2022, you posted
In June 2022, your situation was:
and you left off wondering what better ways there were to start it. Maybe you found how to get:
PRQ#39138 is the name confusion that was discussed at the AUR duplicati-canary-bin web site.
For your own current name confusion, how many /opt/duplicati* do you have now? Inside each is changelog.txt
saying what Duplicati is inside.
seems to line up with one of your installs, which probably means the file gets overwritten unless Arch tools leads you through solution. I don’t know. Do you? Might be wise to stay away for now.
does look like you were using it, but how? Were you in the ignore-the-service mode I’m recently trying to guide you through? All the databases being owned by you suggest either that or a user (you being the user) service with systemd. Some Arch manual documentation on those things is
Autostarting and especially (based on history) On user login / logout. Do those jog any memory?
systemd/User in the Arch manual would also be useful to see if you might have gone in that way.
It’s not a folder. It’s an executable that AUR seems to have removed. For the other folders, take inventory of the /opt/duplicati* as described above, and also figure out what you prefer to be on.
Because the service took 8200, you forced the tray icon to only use 8200, but Linux won’t let it.
Directions from me had a Duplicati stop first, so when you did, tray icon started then got further.
I pretty much guarantee Duplicati doesn’t hardcode the browser, and searched code to be sure.
Default applications in the Arch manual explains the complexity underneath. So no other cases where Firefox pops up, for a clue? While in Firefox (or anything), why not just look at your GUI?
then you’ll see if you see your jobs. Isn’t that the bigger question, compared to the autobrowse?