No, -proposed should never be enabled on a development release. We
actively discourage it (it is still *possible*, but it's not done by
default, and we strongly recommend people *not* to do that), because
it's not abnormal for things to be broken for a period of time in
-proposed during the development release. Things get updated from
Debian, and stay stuck in proposed for a while because they don't build
completely, cause other packages to be uninstallable, etc. Once these
issues are fixed, we let them through to -release. Currently, wily is
not yet released (won't be until October), so having proposed enabled
can indeed break your system pretty badly -- if documentation says to
enable it on a version of ubuntu in development, it's quite probably
wrong and should be fixed.

This is very different from *stable* releases -- at this time, anything
from Vivid and earlier. In that case, it's fine to install packages from
-proposed if you want to test a fix to a bug that we're preparing an
update for.

apt-get upgrade should always get you a properly upgraded system, but
when -proposed is added to the mix, this can break since the packages
there are "in testing", being prepared for an "official" update. Things
*might* be broken.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1489154

Title:
  NetworkManager does not start / fails to start

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