Public bug reported:
Hi
I did a command line install of Ubuntu 8.10-beta using the ubuntu-8.10
-beta-alternate-amd64.iso.
I was not expecting it to pull in dependancies like:
consolekit
dbus
dbus-x11
libck-connector0
libdbus-glib-1-2
libpam-ck-connector
libx11-6
libx11-data
libaxu6
libxcb-xlib0
This probably is a debian-installer bug but I don't want to e-mail the
Debian Install System Team <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> regarding this
since they'll probably bite my head off for reporting an Ubuntu issue to
them. :-(
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Performing a command line install is pulling in recommended dependancies
https
I chose a command line install. Pressed F4 to select it from the boot
menu.
hmm I just read the mailing list thread but I feel I have no options since I
am unable to specify the parameter that would ask apt(debian-installer) to
not install the recommended dependancies.
Is there any way that the d
I can confirm this behaviour. I also did a recent install of Ubuntu from
an alternative 7.04 cd and upon doing updates after booting into Ubuntu,
found ttf-opensymbol failing to install and blocking the other packages.
It seems that the fc-cache utility was complaining about not being able
to write
Ok. The ubuntu-restricted-extras has msttcorefonts has a dependancy and
its that package which when installed resolves the issue. I'm going to
try chaging this bug's "Affects" + "Importance" to try and get someone
to look at it since it wil effect all who do an install of Ubuntu and
then try to get
Synopsis of this bug:
- Do a fresh install of Ubuntu 7.04
- Get the latest security updates (apt/aptitude/synaptics)
- The ttf-opensymbol update will fail to install, blocking the remaining 10-15
updates from happening
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Package ttf-opensymbol fails to update through update manager on default
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: glibc-doc-reference
If you try to install glibc-doc-reference while glibc-doc is already
installed, you get a dpkg error stating that the /usr/share/doc-base
/glibc-manual file already exists in the glibc-doc package.
The way around it for people right n
Public bug reported:
This is a follow on from https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source
/cloud-init/+bug/1802073 + its fix in: https://git.launchpad.net/cloud-
init/commit/?id=0bb4c74e
After a clean launch of Ubuntu 18.04.2 on a t3.small AWS EC2 instance,
in a VPC in the eu-west-1 region, we can
Apologies. I tested further today and could not reproduce the issue.
The /etc/netplan/50-cloud-init.yaml file was correctly regenerated in
all instances I launched from the captured AMI provided I had installed
all OS updates on the original instance before capturing an AMI of it.
** Changed in:
Public bug reported:
Performed a Kubuntu 20.04 Minimal install.
The KDE >> Internet menu didn't show an icon for Mozilla Thunderbird.
dpkg-query shows that Mozilla Thunderbird is installed:
---snip---
root@kubuntuvm:~# cat /etc/os-release
NAME="Ubuntu"
VERSION="20.04 LTS (Focal Fossa)"
ID=ubun
Hi,
I encountered the same dkms build issue reported in this LP bug.
The following patch fixes the issue described in the bug:
https://github.com/longsleep/bcmwl-
ubuntu/blob/master/debian/patches/0015-add-support-for-Linux-3.18.patch
However, you also have the option of NOT using the broadcom-s
Hi,
This issue is a duplicate of the one reported for: #1408385
See this comment for a solution:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/broadcom-
sta/+bug/1408385/comments/4
Regards,
Jinesh
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