Hi,

Sorry for my loss of patience after about 15 hours of working on it late into 
the night.  The GUI and greeter are working again.  I don't really know what 
caused the problems.  Maybe it's because I maxed out the root partition space, 
although I didn't see an error about it, or maybe because of the following.

On some of the steps in the upgrade process, it asked if I wanted to keep my 
modified configuration file or accept the package developer's file, and I 
always chose the package developer's file.  Well, that was probably stupid, and 
even moreso, that I didn't stop to back up my configuration file.  I backed up 
my user data beforehand, but I had no idea of what system stuff I'd want to 
keep, and I thought stopping the installation process would cause problems 
(which it did).

So this screwed things up, for example, my TeX installation is totally broken, 
looking for files in the wrong places, and I haven't figured out how to fix it 
yet.  I use this software for work, and this made me unable to work or do much 
else this weekend.  This caused many errors, and when I finally found the 
message buried somewhere that was causing the problem, and was able to 
reinstall TeX (although it still doesn't work), here's one Debian upgrade  
behavior that I don't understand.

When I installed TeX-related packages, it asked if I wanted to delete a 
humongous amount of packages that were new, I think, for the Squeeze release, 
like deborphan, and other packages I'd never seen before.  I would expect that 
rerunning the entire upgrade process in the steps given in the release notes 
(which I did repeat) would reinstall all these packages that installing TeX 
deleted.  But I have no idea why it didn't, or what makes the installation 
process (like apt-get dist-upgrade) think they should be part of Squeeze in the 
first place.  This includes packages like gnome that the GUI needs.

On the second time through, they didn't get installed, and even packages like 
gnome were missing.  I think I reclaimed disk space with "aptitude clean", then 
tried "apt-get update" and "apt-get dist-upgrade", but it didn't bring these 
missing packages back.  Finally, I found a post in the Debian forums that said 
someone had a similar problem about losing the GUI, and they typed "startx", so 
that worked to bring back the GUI, and then -- whew! -- I thought it probably 
wasn't the video drivers.  Some more forum posts seemed to hint that maybe 
related packages like gnome and X11-related packages were missing.  After 
installing those, and rebooting, the GUI started up automatically.

Anyone who's a little older or less experienced and doesn't have a second 
computer with Internet access would not be able to figure this out.  It's 
simply not a product for the general public.  Quite disappointing.  You really 
have to be ridiculously persistent for it to work, at least if you've made the 
slightest modifications to package configurations.

Also, there were some ambiguous parts of the documentation, like where it says 
you should install a new kernel, there was something that made it unclear about 
whether that was necessary or not.  For example, at first it says you should 
install a new kernel, but then, in section 4.6.1. "Installing the kernel 
metapackage", it says "If you do not see any output, then you will need to 
install a new linux-image package by hand."  Well, I did see some output, so 
the way this instruction is phrased left me thinking oh maybe I don't need to 
install a kernel image.  But I checked what the most recent kernel version was 
by going outside the instruction page.  I saw mine was not the most up-to-date, 
so I did install a newer one.  Maybe I didn't need to.

Linda



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