Thanks! (For both pointing to the resolution and amending the status
change).
FWIW: the fellow that had this problem on the users list just reported
his issue as resolved; he managed to get to a wired connection, did 106
updates & now reports that all is working. I reckon that the libgksu
patch wa
But you are right, Fix Released may be the better status-change. I
forgot to set status correctly. My apologies.
** Changed in: gksu (Ubuntu)
Status: Invalid => Fix Released
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
See Bug #237325,
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/libgksu/+bug/237325, along
with the changes made in version 2.0.5-1ubuntu5.2 of libgksu.
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
You received this bug notification
And just how do you reach that conclusion, particularly without any
verification of what may, or may not, have fixed it? I see nothing in
the gksu or update-manager change logs related to this bug:
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gksu
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/update-manager
This bug report is being closed due to your last comment regarding this
being fixed with an update. For future reference you can manage the
status of your own bugs by clicking on the current status in the yellow
line and then choosing a new status in the revealed drop down box. You
can learn more a
(Erm, so nobody has to plow through the entire comment thread, I run
Hardy, 8.04, on a Sharp Actius MP30 that dates to May 2005.)
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
You received this bug notification because you are a
Just in case anyone reads these things (yes, I know, I'm feeling
snarky), I wanted to mention that the last set of updates fixed the
problem for me. They included some files related to update-manager, and
they showed up on August 12, 2008, plus or minus a day.
Nice to finally have that annoyance
I had the same issue loading synaptic although sometimes it worked and
sometimes not.
If I launched from a terminal using: "sudo synaptic" it worked every time.
Adding: 127.0.1.1
to /etc/hosts worked wonders.
many thanks!
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privi
Removing the domain name from /etc/hosts works for me too!
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hello,
i had the same problem in hardy but i solved it from this link
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?s=e0cafa9e0ceb48eaf29cae2a4edcc855&t=723361
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
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I have just edited my hosts file to change my 127.0.1.1 from
. to just without the domain and it now works.
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
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Bug
On 05/30/2008 01:01 PM, quixote wrote:
> I hate to keep being the wet blanket here, but . . . my /etc/hosts file
> looks okay (127.0.0.1 localhost, 127.0.1.1 ). But I
> continue to have the gksu problem. It affects not just the upgrade
> manager. Anything accessed via the GUI that normally asks
On Fri, 2008-05-30 at 18:18 +, Florian Wallner wrote:
> The hostname for 127.0.0.1 should be 'localhost'. It should do no harm
> however to add another line like this:
> '127.0.1.1 ' It should be the hostname as defined
> in /etc/hostname , I think
>
> cheers,
> --Florian
>
Many
I hate to keep being the wet blanket here, but . . . my /etc/hosts file
looks okay (127.0.0.1 localhost, 127.0.1.1 ). But I
continue to have the gksu problem. It affects not just the upgrade
manager. Anything accessed via the GUI that normally asks for a
password hangs up at that point. If I r
Thank you for clarifying that Florian. My hosts file doesn't contain a line
for localhost, but if I ping localhost, it replies from 127.0.0.1 just as it
would if it were listed in the hosts file. In Windows, the hosts file
explicitly lists localhost, so for my curiosity does anyone know where
The hostname for 127.0.0.1 should be 'localhost'. It should do no harm however
to add another line like this:
'127.0.1.1 ' It should be the hostname as defined in
/etc/hostname , I think
cheers,
--Florian
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
htt
Florian,
You are wonderful! I went into my hosts file, and sure enough there was no
listing for my hostname (I entered a bogus domain about a month ago, and then
decided to remove it the same day, and the hosts file still contained the bogus
domain!). After correcting the 127.0.0.1 hostname li
I have the impression, that this problem is somehow related to sudos or
gksus ability to resolve its own hostname. This Bug appeared for me
after a fresh hardy install. I discovered that my Notebook was not able
to resolve it's own hostname (somehow /etc/hosts got messed up) after
fixing that gksu
quixote: Thank you for the tip on $sudo synaptic. I've been wondering
for 2 days now how I was going to get gksu corrected. I'm running
Edubuntu 8.04 (upgraded from 7.10 a while back), and everything was
running beautifully until about 2 days ago when I ran the updates, and
then gksu wouldn't pres
NoOp: $gksu id doesn't work doing anything I've tried, including ctrl-c
followed by another gksu id. I've also tried opening another terminal
window just for the hell of it. I haven't tried doing it outside the
GUI altogether.
(What does work, just to reiterate, is $sudo synaptic and then using
On 05/28/2008 07:03 PM, quixote wrote:
> $gksu id does not work for me either. Same thing: "starting
> administrative" tab visible on the bottom panel, and then it disappears.
> This is after I installed all updates as of this morning (May 28),
> including a big set with new linux headers etc etc.
$gksu id does not work for me either. Same thing: "starting
administrative" tab visible on the bottom panel, and then it disappears.
This is after I installed all updates as of this morning (May 28),
including a big set with new linux headers etc etc.
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update-manager fails to bring up the pass
If I run in the terminal
$ gksu id
it briefly shows "Starting Administrative Application" in the bottom panel, and
then hangs, printing nothing in the terminal.
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
You received this b
Locale: en_US.UTF-8
$gksu id
briefly shows a "Starting Administrativ..." tab on the bottom panel the
first time. If I repeat the command immediately, the password prompt
comes up. I see that there are updates available today - this is a
laptop (A21 Thinkpad, 800Mhz, 128MB of RAM) that I generally
@javiespa: That workaround does work for me.
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On Wed, 2008-05-14 at 10:27 +, javiespa wrote:
> A simple workaround that works in my case (while the bug is fixed):
> 1. When you get updates notified, open the update manager as usual
> 2. Instead of installing the existing updates (this will produce the problem
> we all have), pres Check fo
A simple workaround that works in my case (while the bug is fixed):
1. When you get updates notified, open the update manager as usual
2. Instead of installing the existing updates (this will produce the problem we
all have), pres Check for new updates. This will ask for the admin password and
wi
Update to 8.04 successful. Early updates worked OK. I notice update
manager has been updated more than once. Now when I click on the update
icon the list of updates is presented but clicking on install sends the
computer into an endless loop. My only solution is Ctrl, Alt, Backspace
and relogin. I
I've had this problem with the last few Ubuntu releases. However with
Hardy it's gotten worse. Before killing gksu and restarting the update-
manager would allow me to install updates. Now I have to sudo update-
manager to get updates to install.
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update-manager fails to bring up the passwor
I can confirm this issue in hardy as well - Running release hardy on a
D630.
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
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I have an old laptop as well, running hardy, and I see this problem
still.
Sometimes it will stall while trying to update. Often it will
successfully update, but then stall, for example, after clicking to
redownload an updated package list.
Also it always works by doing sudo update-manager, or su
I have this problem on Hardy Heron with all updates installed as of Apr
18, 11 am Los Angeles time. I have a relatively old Sharp MP30 laptop.
After I kill the process and retry update-manager, it just hangs before
the password window appears, so retry does not work in my case.
I get the same iss
Ditto above (Robert & Henning.) Didn't have the problem in Gutsy on the
same machine, a slow PII. I kill the process via the System Monitor
which indicates, like most everything else listed, Update Manager is
sleeping. Second attempt to update works as it should.
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update-manager fails to bring
I also have this problem in Hardy. It happens everytime Update Manager
has a new list of updates to process. If I kill it and retry, it works
just fine.
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
You received this bug notif
I can confirm that problem in hardy.
I encounter that problem only on an "Toshiba Satellite Pro 4300", a slow
system compared to nowadays systems, so it may be a timing problem?
** Changed in: gksu (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => Confirmed
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update-manager fails to bring up the password
** Attachment added: "strace8159"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/12531134/strace8159
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
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** Attachment added: "strace8158"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/12531133/strace8158
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
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** Attachment added: "strace8048"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/12531123/strace8048
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
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I figured it out. strace -o filename -p pid
** Attachment added: "strace -o strace8047 -p 8047"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/12531115/strace8047
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/187982
You received this bug notificati
oops. All those attachments were empty, so I didn't bother.
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I frequently have this problem too. Update Manager will work until I
choose to click "install the updates". Then there will usually be a
window that appears briefly in the panel "starting administrative
application". Sometimes a window will appear on the desktop and ask for
my password, and when t
Hi!
Here is the requested information:
ps afx:
6455 ?Sl 0:04 /usr/bin/python2.5 /usr/bin/update-manager
6483 ?S 0:00 \_ gksu --desktop
/usr/share/applications/update-manager.desktop -- /usr/sbin/synaptic
--hide-main-window --non-interactive --par
6488 ?Ss
Thanks for this additional information.
Could you please run:
$ ps afx
when this hang appears and copy the part of the output where update-manager is
in into this bugreport?
Could you also please run
$ strace -p $pid_nr
where $pid_nr is the ID of either synaptic or gksu and paste the output to t
I use Ubuntu 7.10 and UTF-8.
//Matthias Andersson
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update-manager fails to bring up the password prompt for root privileges
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Thanks for your bugreport.
What version of ubuntu do you use? This sounds like a bug in gksu (that
applicaton used to get root priviledges). What locale do you use?
Thanks,
Michael
** Changed in: update-manager (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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update-manager fails to bring up the
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