Hi

 

As for “sudo apt —fix-broken install” clearing up my problems, I wouldn’t break 
out the champagne just yet.

 

I have another pastebin at https://pastebin.com/qYTLsTCZ

which tells more of the story. Overall, the error messages are circular: apt 
complains about conflicts with packages that don’t exist on my system; apt 
wants me to install packages that it will later on say are “no longer needed”, 
and when I uninstall them, it will request them again. Unless these problems 
are resolved, apt will refuse to upgrade my OS to 18.10. Nearly all of these 
package problems involve Python packages, I noticed.

 

The pastebin was supposed to have bash highlighting. However, it seemed to 
color nearly everything. Clicking on the “raw” button to see the un-highlighted 
version might be better.

 

Paul King

 

From: ubuntu-studio-users <ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com> On 
Behalf Of webmas...@jtbadn.com
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2019 1:11 PM
To: Ubuntu Studio Users <ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com>
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Offer to upgrade failed

 

Also, 

 

sudo apt dist-upgrade 

(sudo dist-upgrade may have been a typo on my part)

 

Regularly I use

 

apt update

apt upgrade

apt dist-upgrade

apt full-upgrade

apt autoremove

apt autoclean

do-release-upgrade 

   -p for proposed

   -d for development 

Respectfully, 

 

Joshua T. Sieber

 


On Jan 18, 2019, at 1:06 PM, "webmas...@jtbadn.com 
<mailto:webmas...@jtbadn.com> " <webmas...@jtbadn.com 
<mailto:webmas...@jtbadn.com> > wrote:

I actually think one of them is supposed to be

 

sudo apt install —fix-missing

 

Happy to hear sudo apt —fix-broken install cleared you up.

 

Respectfully, 

 

Joshua T. Sieber

 


On Jan 18, 2019, at 7:28 AM, <sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > 
<sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > wrote:

Many thanks for your sugggestions. See pastebin: https://pastebin.com/u8nDyUSP

 

sudo apt —fix-broken install

                This command didn’t work.

sudo apt install —fix-broken

                This command did, and suggested to remove packages that I later 
tried to remove using apt. This succeeded, and:

apt install -f

                didn’t do much.

 

The weird package problems I have been having have not been fixed, and the the 
suggested packages with apt install –fix-broken were not the same ones that 
were “blocked from update.”

 

Paul

 

 

From: ubuntu-studio-users <ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com> > On Behalf Of 
webmas...@jtbadn.com <mailto:webmas...@jtbadn.com> 
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2019 2:24 AM
To: Ubuntu Studio Users <ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com> >
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Offer to upgrade failed

 

Paul, 

 

     OK it looks like because of some dependencies that haven’t been met there 
are some programs that need to be there in order to continue.

 

Try these;

 

sudo apt —fix-broken install

sudo apt install —fix-broken

apt install -f

 

 

 

Respectfully, 

 

Joshua T. Sieber

 


On Jan 17, 2019, at 12:30 AM, <sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > 
<sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > wrote:

I have tried this, and I keep getting reminded about the blocked updates, and 
the refusal to upgrade to the latest version.

 

Here is my latest effort:

 

Script started on Wed 16 Jan 2019 08:36:02 PM EST

paul@rivendell $ sudo apt update

[sudo] password for paul: 

paul@rivendell $ sudo apt update -y

[sudo] password for paul: 

 [Working]            Hit:1 http://archive.canonical.com/ubuntu xenial InRelease

[Waiting for headers] [Connecting to ppa.launchpad.net 
<http://ppa.launchpad.net>  (91.189.95.83) [1 InRelease gpgv 11.5 kB] [Waiting 
for headers] [Connecting to ppa.launchpa                                     0% 
[Waiting for headers] [Waiting for headers]    Hit:2 
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial InRelease

0% [Waiting for headers] 0% [2 InRelease gpgv 247 kB] [Waiting for headers] 
[Waiting for headers] Hit:3 
http://ppa.launchpad.net/danielrichter2007/grub-customizer/ubuntu xenial 
InRelease 0% [2 InRelease gpgv 247 kB] [Waiting for headers] 0% [Waiting for 
headers] [Connecting to ppa.launchpad.net <http://ppa.launchpad.net>  
(91.189.95.83)] 0% [3 InRelease gpgv 17.6 kB] [Waiting for headers] [Connecting 
to ppa.launchpa   Hit:4 http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-updates 
InRelease

0% [3 InRelease gpgv 17.6 kB] [Connecting to ppa.launchpad.net 
<http://ppa.launchpad.net>  (91.189.95.83)] 0% [Waiting for headers] 
[Connecting to ppa.launchpad.net <http://ppa.launchpad.net>  (91.189.95.83)] 0% 
[4 InRelease gpgv 109 kB] [Waiting for headers] [Connecting to ppa.launchpad 0% 
[Waiting for headers] [Waiting for headers] Hit:5 
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-backports InRelease 0% [Waiting for 
headers] 0% [5 InRelease gpgv 107 kB] [Waiting for headers] [Waiting for 
headers]                                                                        
Hit:6 http://ppa.launchpad.net/danielrichter2007/grub-customizer/ubuntu trusty 
InRelease

0% [5 InRelease gpgv 107 kB] [Waiting for headers]                              
                    0% [Waiting for headers] 0% [6 InRelease gpgv 15.5 kB] 
[Waiting for headers]                                                   0% 
[Waiting for headers]                        Hit:7 
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu xenial-security InRelease  0% [Working] 0% [7 
InRelease gpgv 107 kB] 20% [Working]  Reading package lists... 0% Reading 
package lists... 0% Reading package lists... 1% Reading package lists... 3% 
Reading package lists... 3% Reading package lists... 7% Reading package 
lists... 7% Reading package lists... 8% Reading package lists... 8%Reading 
package lists... 10%Reading package lists... 10%Reading package lists... 
10%Reading package lists... 10%Reading package lists... 10%Reading package 
lists... 10%Reading package lists... 10%Reading package lists... 10%Reading 
package lists... 31%Reading package lists... 31%Reading package lists... 
52%Reading package lists... 52%Reading package lists... 60%Reading package 
lists... 60%Reading package lists... 61%Reading package lists... 72%Reading 
package lists... 72%Reading package lists... 72%Reading package lists... 
72%Reading package lists... 73%Reading package lists... 73%Reading package 
lists... 73%Reading package lists... 73%Reading package lists... 76%Reading 
package lists... 76%Reading package lists... 79%Reading package lists... 
79%Reading package lists... 81%Reading package lists... 81%Reading package 
lists... 81%Reading package lists... 81%Reading package lists... 81%Reading 
package lists... 81%Reading package lists... 81%Reading package lists... 
81%Reading package lists... 84%Reading package lists... 84%Reading package 
lists... 86%Reading package lists... 86%Reading package lists... 87%Reading 
package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 
87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package 
lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading 
package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 
87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package 
lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading 
package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 87%Reading package lists... 
87%Reading package lists... 89%Reading package lists... 89%Reading package 
lists... 91%Reading package lists... 91%Reading package lists... 93%Reading 
package lists... 93%Reading package lists... 93%Reading package lists... 
93%Reading package lists... 93%Reading package lists... 93%Reading package 
lists... 93%Reading package lists... 93%Reading package lists... 95%Reading 
package lists... 95%Reading package lists... 96%Reading package lists... 
96%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package 
lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading 
package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 
97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package 
lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading 
package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 
97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package 
lists... 97%Reading package lists... 97%Reading package lists... Done 

Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency 
tree... 1%Building dependency tree... 50%Building dependency tree... 
50%Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%Reading state information... 0%Reading state 
information... Done

3 packages can be upgraded. Run 'apt list --upgradable' to see them.

paul@rivendell $ apt list --upgradable

Listing... 0%Listing... 0%Listing... 1%Listing... Done

python-laditools/xenial,xenial 1.1.0-2 all [upgradable from: 1.0.1-2]

python-oauthlib/xenial,xenial 1.0.3-1 all [upgradable from: 0.6.1-1]

python-openssl/xenial-updates,xenial-updates,xenial-security,xenial-security 
0.15.1-2ubuntu0.2 amd64 [upgradable from: 0.13-2ubuntu6]

paul@rivendell $ sudo apt upgrade -y

Reading package lists... 0%Reading package lists... 100%Reading package 
lists... Done

Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency 
tree... 50%Building dependency tree... 50%Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%Reading state information... 0%Reading state 
information... Done

Calculating upgrade... 0%Calculating upgrade... 10%Calculating upgrade... Done

Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have

requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable

distribution that some required packages have not yet been created

or been moved out of Incoming.

The following information may help resolve the situation:

 

The following packages have unmet dependencies:

python-enum : Conflicts: python-enum34 but 1.1.2-1 is to be installed

E: Broken packages

paul@rivendell $ sudo dist-upgrade -y

sudo: dist-upgrade: command not found

paul@rivendell $ sudo dist-upgrade -y

Reading package lists... 0%Reading package lists... 100%Reading package 
lists... Done

Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency tree... 0%Building dependency 
tree... 50%Building dependency tree... 50%Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%Reading state information... 0%Reading state 
information... Done

Calculating upgrade... 0%Calculating upgrade... 10%Calculating upgrade... Done

The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer required:

  python-blinker python-cffi-backend python-ipaddress python-jwt

Use 'sudo apt autoremove' to remove them.

The following packages have been kept back:

  python-laditools python-oauthlib python-openssl

0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 3 not upgraded.

paul@rivendell $ sudo do-release-upgrade 

Checking for a new Ubuntu release

Please install all available updates for your release before upgrading.

paul@rivendell $ exit

 

Script done on Wed 16 Jan 2019 08:38:20 PM EST

 

From: ubuntu-studio-users <ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com> > On Behalf Of 
webmas...@jtbadn.com <mailto:webmas...@jtbadn.com> 
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2019 9:11 AM
To: Ubuntu Studio Users <ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com> >
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Offer to upgrade failed

 

Heya Paul,

 

     It sounds like there were some upgrades that hadn’t been processed yet.

 

sudo apt update  

sudo apt upgrade -y 

sudo dist-upgrade -y

  

At the run those command you should be able to do the

 

sudo do-release-upgrade

 

Best of luck to you!

 

Respectfully, 

 

Joshua T. Sieber

 


On Jan 16, 2019, at 7:43 AM, <sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > 
<sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net> > wrote:

I have tried the command “sudo do-release-upgrade", and it wanted me to do an 
upgrade first. I did one through the software updater. After an initial 
upgrade, it reported “all packages are up to date.”

 

Do-release-upgrade still wanted me to update my packages first. With the 
package updater, I got the names of three packages that were “blocked from 
update”. 

 

On the






command line, this is what I got when I tried to remove the “blocked” packages:

 

Script started on Wed 16 Jan 2019 07:00:48 AM EST

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ sudo do-release-upgrade 

[sudo] password for paul: 

Checking for a new Ubuntu release

Please install all available updates for your release before upgrading.

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ apt-get remove python-laditools-1.1..

E: Could not open lock file /var/lib/dpkg/lock-frontend - open (13: Permission 
denied)

E: Unable to acquire the dpkg frontend lock (/var/lib/dpkg/lock-frontend), are 
you root?

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ apt-get remove python-laditools-1.1.0-2

Reading package lists... 0%

Reading package lists... 100%

Reading package lists... Done

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... Done

E: Unable to locate package python-laditools-1.1.0-2

E: Couldn't find any package by glob 'python-laditools-1.1.0-2'

E: Couldn't find any package by regex 'python-laditools-1.1.0-2'

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ apt remove python-oauthlib-1.0.3-1

Reading package lists... 0%

Reading package lists... 100%

Reading package lists... Done

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... Done

E: Unable to locate package python-oauthlib-1.0.3-1

E: Couldn't find any package by glob 'python-oauthlib-1.0.3-1

E: Couldn't find any package by regex 'python-oauthlib-1.0.3-1

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ sudo apt remove 
python-openssl-0.15.1-2ubuntu0.2

Reading package lists... 0%

Reading package lists... 100%

Reading package lists... Done

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 0%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree... 50%

Building dependency tree       

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... 0%

Reading state information... Done

E: Unable to locate package python-openssl-0.15.1-2ubuntu0.2

E: Couldn't find any package by glob 'python-openssl-0.15.1-2ubuntu0.2

E: Couldn't find any package by regex 'python-openssl-0.15.1-2ubuntu0.2

paul@rivendell: ~paul rivendell~ $ exit

 

Script done on Wed 16 Jan 2019 07:06:30 AM EST

 

This is all I have. Let me know if this helps.

 

Paul

 

From: ubuntu-studio-users <ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com> > On Behalf Of Ross Gammon
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2019 2:41 PM
To: ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com 
<mailto:ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com> 
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Offer to upgrade failed

 

Hi Paul,

There are some instructions for upgrading from 16.04 & 17.10 to 18.04 here 
(which seems to be what you have done):

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BionicBeaver/ReleaseNotes#Upgrading_from_Ubuntu_16.04_LTS_or_17.10

As you have hit errors, it might be better to follow the Ubuntu Server update 
instructions and do a "sudo do-release-upgrade" on the command line. Then it 
might be easier to copy and paste any error messages on an email to the list.

There are places you can retrieve the apt logs, but you probably won't need to 
if the error is obvious to us here.

Regards,

Ross

On 14/01/2019 11:58, sci...@vex.net <mailto:sci...@vex.net>  wrote:

Hi,

 

I am using Ubuntu Studio 16.04.xx, and I noticed that I was offered, through 
the “software updater”, an opportunity to upgrade to the next LTS version. I 
cliked the button that said “Update …”, and all the window does is disappear, 
with no further response. I have tried this several times.

 

I have had what I call minor problems with the software updater in the past, 
where it would say that update has failed for some unknown reason, I dutifully 
click “send report”, but in fact, the system was updated, but for a few Python 
packages which look old, and “blocked” from update.

 

It appears as if the “minor” problems may be causing update to fail. I cannot 
find any system log that tells me what crashed, although I managed to read one 
of my reports that Software Updater would send, and I remember seeing a message 
that apt had crashed (I recall it was apt and not aptd). I did not see 
information there that gave a reason.

 

Paul King








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