Re: ONE of my computers won't boot Ubuntu 19.04 (only) thumb drives

2019-04-15 Thread kht-lists
For what it might be worth... I use the "disks" utility (gnome-disks) on Linux 
to burn images to usb drives and MicroSD cards (for the Raspberry Pi). Recently 
I was burning a LOT of MicroSD cards while trying various distros on the Pi. 
Long story short... some of the images would not boot... UNLESS I formatted the 
MicroSD card first. This in theory should not be necessary as the iso image 
SHOULD overwrite the boot sector of the target device. But that is the theory.  
I would suggest formatting a flash drive and then using your preferred method 
to transfer the image. Perhaps the BIOS in one of the machines is just a little 
strange.

One other suggestion - although it is a bit of a pain on a netbook or laptop - 
Shut the thing down, disconnect it from everything external, remove the battery 
pack and open it up to get to the button battery or coin cell which keeps the 
BIOS active. Remove or unplug the tiny battery and let the BIOS clear. (Or look 
at the manuals - there may be a way to do a BIOS reset without opening it up - 
might try that first.) I have cleared up some of the most bizarre errors with 
this technique.

Ken

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‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Monday, April 15, 2019 2:20 PM, A. Richard Miller 
 wrote:

> Hi, All:
>
> Perhaps this SHOULD be a worry before Thursday's release. Please advise...
>
> For years, I've used UNetBootIn to burn draft Ubuntu .iso files and test or 
> install them on our computers at MMS, for our client Ubuntu users, and at our 
> monthly FOSS User Group meetings in Natick, Massachusetts, USA.
>
> That worked for draft desktop Ubuntu 19.04, too - until about two months ago. 
> It still works on two of the three computers on which I test. But since 
> SOMETHING changed, I get a black screen, or repeating attempts to read the 
> thumb drive, on a Dell Inspiron 11-3157 netbook. (One of the working 
> computers is a near-identical Dell 11-3147 netbook!) I can still boot and 
> install successfully on the balky netbook, too, with Ubuntu earlier than 
> 19.04 using the same thumb drive or any other.
>
> Newer .iso downloads and burns don't help. Other burner programs (Startup 
> Disk Creator, MultiWriter) don't help. Burning on a different computer 
> doesn't help. Burning onto other thumb drives* doesn't help. (Although they 
> ALL work on other computers.)
>
> *- I've seen ONE exception. Less than two weeks ago, a friend burned the 
> daily .iso using his current Fedora and its default burning app, and that 
> thumb drive DID work on my netbook. (Sorry; I don't have it, and don't know 
> which app.)
>
> Any ideas? Might this affect other users out there?
>
> Thanks, from
> --Dick Miller, Partner, MMS 
>
>   Co-Leader, [FOSS User Group at Natick Community-Senior 
> Center](http://millermicro.com/FOSSUserGroupNatick.html)
>
> --
> | A. Richard & Jill A. Miller| MILLER MICROCOMPUTER SERVICES |
> | Mailto:themill...@millermicro.com  | 61 Lake Shore Road|
> | Web: http://www.millermicro.com/   | Natick, MA 01760-2099, USA|
> | Voice: 508/653-6136, 9AM-9PM -0400(EDT)| NMEA N 42.29993°, W 71.36558° |
>
> On 4/11/19 5:00 PM, Adam Conrad wrote:
>
>> As of seventeen seconds ago, disco has entered the Final Freeze period
>> in preparation for the final release of Ubuntu 19.04 next week.
>>
>> The current uploads in the queue will be reviewed and either accepted
>> or rejected as appropriate by pre-freeze standards, but anything from
>> here on should fit two broad categories:
>>
>> 1)
>>
>> Release critical bugs that affect ISOs, installers, or otherwise
>>can't be fixed easily post-release.
>>
>> 2) Bug fixes that would be suitable for post-release SRUs, which we
>>may choose to accept, reject, or shunt to -updates for 0-day SRUs
>>on a case-by-case basis.
>>
>> For unseeded packages that aren't on any media or in any supported
>> sets, it's still more or less a free-for-all, but do take care not to
>> upload changes that you can't readily validate before release.  That
>> is, ask yourself if the current state is "good enough", compared to
>> the burden of trying to fix all the bugs you might accidentally be
>> introducing with your shiny new upload.
>>
>> We will shut down cronjobs and spin some RC images late Friday or early
>> Saturday once the archive and proposed-migration have settled a bit,
>> and we expect everyone with a vested interest in a flavour (or two) and
>> a few spare hours here and there to get to testing to make sure we have
>> another uneventful release next week.  Last minute panic is never fun.
>>
>> On behalf of the Ubuntu Release Team,
>>
>> ... Adam Conrad-- 
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ONE of my computers won't boot Ubuntu 19.04 (only) thumb drives

2019-04-15 Thread A. Richard Miller

Hi, All:

Perhaps this SHOULD be a worry before Thursday's release. Please advise...

For years, I've used UNetBootIn to burn draft Ubuntu .iso files and test 
or install them on our computers at MMS, for our client Ubuntu users, 
and at our monthly FOSS User Group meetings in Natick, Massachusetts, USA.


That worked for draft desktop Ubuntu 19.04, too - until about two months 
ago. It still works on two of the three computers on which I test. But 
since SOMETHING changed, I get a black screen, or repeating attempts to 
read the thumb drive, on a Dell Inspiron 11-3157 netbook. (One of the 
working computers is a near-identical Dell 11-3147 netbook!) I can still 
boot and install successfully on the balky netbook, too, with Ubuntu 
earlier than 19.04 using the same thumb drive or any other.


Newer .iso downloads and burns don't help. Other burner programs 
(Startup Disk Creator, MultiWriter) don't help. Burning on a different 
computer doesn't help. Burning onto other thumb drives* doesn't help. 
(Although they ALL work on other computers.)


*- I've seen ONE exception. Less than two weeks ago, a friend burned the 
daily .iso using his current Fedora and its default burning app, and 
that thumb drive DID work on my netbook. (Sorry; I don't have it, and 
don't know which app.)


Any ideas? Might this affect other users out there?

Thanks, from
--Dick Miller, Partner, MMS >
	Co-Leader, FOSS User Group at Natick Community-Senior Center 



--
*| A. Richard & Jill A. Miller| MILLER MICROCOMPUTER SERVICES |
| Mailto:themill...@millermicro.com  | 61 Lake Shore Road|
| Web: http://www.millermicro.com/   | Natick, MA 01760-2099, USA|
| Voice: 508/653-6136, 9AM-9PM -0400(EDT)| NMEA N 42.29993°, W 71.36558° |*


On 4/11/19 5:00 PM, Adam Conrad wrote:

As of seventeen seconds ago, disco has entered the Final Freeze period
in preparation for the final release of Ubuntu 19.04 next week.

The current uploads in the queue will be reviewed and either accepted
or rejected as appropriate by pre-freeze standards, but anything from
here on should fit two broad categories:

1)*Release critical bugs that affect ISOs, installers, or otherwise 
can't be fixed easily post-release.*


2) Bug fixes that would be suitable for post-release SRUs, which we
may choose to accept, reject, or shunt to -updates for 0-day SRUs
on a case-by-case basis.

For unseeded packages that aren't on any media or in any supported
sets, it's still more or less a free-for-all, but do take care not to
upload changes that you can't readily validate before release.  That
is, ask yourself if the current state is "good enough", compared to
the burden of trying to fix all the bugs you might accidentally be
introducing with your shiny new upload.

We will shut down cronjobs and spin some RC images late Friday or early
Saturday once the archive and proposed-migration have settled a bit,
and we expect everyone with a vested interest in a flavour (or two) and
a few spare hours here and there to get to testing to make sure we have
another uneventful release next week.  Last minute panic is never fun.

On behalf of the Ubuntu Release Team,

... Adam Conrad



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Re: Right way to submit patches for Ubuntu packages

2019-04-15 Thread Robie Basak
[dropping bystanders from Cc:, leaving only Dan and the list]

Thank you for volunteering to help with Ubuntu!

On Sat, Apr 13, 2019 at 08:30:06AM -0700, Dan Kegel wrote:
> Any advice for the next step in navigating
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/StableReleaseUpdates ?

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/StableReleaseUpdates#Procedure tries to document
what is needed step-by-step. Is there anything particular in this list
you need help with? This list is the right place to ask, but I don't
really know where I can start to answer your question apart from
pointing to that list.

> Or is a word to a python maintainer more appropriate?

We can ask the usual suspects for code review once you're ready with
some proposed uploads.

HTH,

Robie


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Re: etherape - deb package - incorrect dependency

2019-04-15 Thread Andreas Hasenack
Thanks, looks like this was filed as a bug already:

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/etherape/+bug/1752712

On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 6:26 PM Greg W  wrote:
>
>
> Hi,
>
> etherape package requires "libgnomeui-0" deb as dependency in order to run. 
> Currently this is not defined and etherape will fail to run if libgnomeui-0 
> isn't already installed.
>
>
> Package: etherape
> Status: install ok installed
> Priority: optional
> Section: gnome
> Installed-Size: 230
> Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers 
> Architecture: amd64
> Version: 0.9.16-1
> Depends: libc-ares2 (>= 1.7.0), libc6 (>= 2.15), libgdk-pixbuf2.0-0 (>= 
> 2.22.0), libglade2-0 (>= 1:2.6.4-2~), libglib2.0-0 (>= 2.39.4), 
> libgnomecanvas2-0 (>= 2.11.1), libgtk2.0-0 (>= 2.14.0), libpcap0.8 (>= 
> 0.9.8), libpopt0 (>= 1.14), etherape-data (= 0.9.16-1)
> Description: graphical network monitor
>  EtherApe is a graphical network monitor modeled after etherman. it displays
>  network activity graphically, showing active hosts as circles of varying
>  size, and traffic among them as lines of varying width.
>  .
>  It features link layer, ip and TCP modes, color-color coded protocols
>  display, Ethernet, FDDI, Token Ring, ISDN, PPP and SLIP devices. It can
>  filter traffic to be shown, and can read traffic from a file as well as
>  live from the network.
> Original-Maintainer: Patrick Matthäi 
> Homepage: http://etherape.sourceforge.net
>
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Greg W.
>
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