There are very few stars visible to the unaided eye in the night sky of Earth that are 3,000 light years (LY) from Earth.
Wikipedia has a list of "brightest stars" which includes the Sun and 92 other stars which have the greatest apparent brightness as seen from Earth.
When the list is sorted by distance I find that only six are more than one thousand light years from Earth, and even the farthest star listed, Deneb, is "only" about 2,615 light years from Earth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brightest_stars
They also have a "list of stars more luminous than than any closer star". Each star on the list is more luminous than any star which is closer to Earth than it.
WR 24 is listed as being 5,000 light years from Earth, and Eta Carinae is listed as being 7,500 light years from Earth. All the other stars on the list farther than 2,000 lightyears from Earth are not naked eye stars.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stars_more_luminous_than_any_closer_star#:~:text=This%20is%20a%20list%20of%20stars%20which%20are,luminous%20star%20within%205%20light-years%20of%20the%20Sun.
The list of most luminous stars known has only three over 3,000 lightyears from Earth which are visible to the naked eye from Earth, including Eta Carinae at 7,500 light years (LY), WR 24 8,200 LY, and WR 82A at 8,200 LY.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_luminous_stars
It also has a secondary list of notable stars which are very luminous but less than the 1,000,000 times the luminosity of the Sun required for the main list.
All of those stars are naked eye stars as seen from Earth and 14 of them are at least 3,000 light years from Earth.
The five that are closest to 3,000 LY from Earth are:
Omicron 2 Canis Majoris 2,800 LY, Upsilon Orionis 2,900 LY, Lambda Cephei 3,100 LY, Mu Normae 3,260 LY, and Sigma Cygni 3,260 LY.
Type II supernovas are caused by core collapse in massive stars. Some subtypes occur in stars in the mass range of 140 to 250 times the mass of the Sun. Other subtypes can occur in stars with lower mass ranges, down to 9 to 10 times the mass of the Sun.
So all or almost all stars with 10 times the mass of the Sun should become supernovas eventually.
Most main sequence (luminosity class V) spectral class B stars have less than 10 times the mass of the Sun, but spectral class B0V and B1V stars have over 10 times the mass of the Sun.
Main sequence (luminosity class V) spectral class O stars have masses between 15 and 90 times the mass of the Sun. They are very rare with an estimated 20,000 in the entire Mikly Way Galaxy.
Wolf-Rayet stars have masses between about 10 and 200 times the mass of the Sun.
Giant (luminosity class III) stars usually have masses in the range of 0.3 to 8 times the mass of the Sun and so would not become type II supernovae.
Super giant (luminosity class I) stars usually have masses over 10 times the mass of the Sun and become type II supernovas.
Hypergiant (luminosity class 0) stars have masses of over 25 times the mass of the Sun and become type II supernovas.
The five stars mentioned above closet to being 3,000 lightyears from Earth:
Omicron 2 Canis Majoris 2,800 LY, Upsilon Orionis 2,900 LY, Lambda Cephei 3,100 LY, Mu Normae 3,260 LY, and Sigma Cygni 3,260 LY.
Should all become type II supernovas someday.
Type Ia supernovas happen in binary or multiple star systems where at least one of the stars is a white dwarf star. If the two stars are close enough, the white dwarf can acquire matter from the other star which might eventually result in a supernova explosion.
So astronomers can classify which stars should become supernovas and which star systems have a chance of becoming supernovas.
Astronomers predict that Betelgeuse, for example, is about to become a supernova, sometime in the next million years or so.
So eventually, as better and better observations and measurements are made, and as theories of stellar evolution become more accurate, astronomers should be able to make better and better predictions about when a specific supernova candidate star will become a supernova.
But current laws of physics show that it is impossible for any signal that a star has become a supernova to arrive on Earth more than minutes, hours, or days before the light of the supernova arrives.