While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register
- NVIDIA switching to open kernel modules by default in future driver update for Turing+
- SteamOS 3.6 Preview for Steam Deck brings numerous big new features
- Bungie's classic free FPS 'Marathon' is now on Steam
- Collabora detail the improved updater for Steam Deck in SteamOS 3.6
- Crusader Kings III gets a Free Weekend plus a big Paradox sale on Steam
- > See more over 30 days here
-
The Official Stardew Valley Cookbook is out now
- Sonar -
Ghost of Tsushima single-player only on Steam Deck due …
- LordDaveTheKind -
Back 4 Blood gets Denuvo Anti-tamper removed and an ant…
- dpanter -
SteamOS 3.6.2 Preview for Steam Deck fixes up double-in…
- Pyretic -
Ghost of Tsushima single-player only on Steam Deck due …
- kokoko3k - > See more comments
Latest Forum Posts
- Emulation Recommendations!
- missingno - AMD Graphics (Native - Non Native) Testing Area (mesa obiaff ppa)…
- mrdeathjr - Starfield - AMD Frame generation working
- rustigsmed - Hi, i need help with wine read access denied issue.
- talionranger117 - Cyberpunk 2077 in Wine
- Shmerl - See more posts
Last edited by Koopacabras on 4 April 2024 at 10:08 pm UTC
View PC info
Yeah, the recompilation was necessary. You don't want to have an insecure install, I certainly don't want that.
I just stop upgrading packages when this happend, because apt wanted to remove a lot of packages. Now I'm just patiently waiting for the moment when all the packages will be ready.
That is my strategy whenever I have this kind of situation on Ubuntu. I mean apt wanting to remove multiple packages that seem to be useful or necessary. Also I like to use proposed repo. I didn't enable it before the xz shit, but I thought I had. Now it is enabled.
The number of packages that are upgradable increases all the time. First it was 6 hundred something than just above 1 thousand and today morning I have 1670 packages to upgrade.
Last edited by Bestia on 5 April 2024 at 6:06 am UTC
View PC info
Now I also have 1819 packages to upgrade. I wouldn't upgrade if there was several dozen packages to be removed and anything above 100 is a huge number.
Also running
sudo apt upgrade
in terminal on my end:That looks good, but I still wonder, what will happen with the other packages. Maybe the ones, that get updated now will conflict with the ones, that stayed at current version. So I'm still waiting, before actually starting the upgrade.
View PC info
https://wiki.debian.org/ReleaseGoals/64bit-time
Ubuntu is still based on Debian and many devs are still working in both projects.
https://people.canonical.com/~vorlon/armhf-time_t/
Also there is this in the ubuntu-devel mailing list: Attention upgrading Noble systems and Missing t64 transitions
https://magenta.jak-linux.org/ubuntu-archive/distcheck/noble.armhf/global-ben.missing-t64.txt
Last edited by Bestia on 6 April 2024 at 8:23 am UTC
View PC info
sudo apt upgrade
there was 960 packages to upgrade and none to remove.After that I either did a logout or reboot and was greeted with greyish screen with Ooops! something went wrong text.
So GDM was borked. I switched to VT and from there started Openbox, which got me something to work with. I checked for updates again. The upgrade wouldn't do any upgrades, so I decided to run
sudo apt full-upgrade
this time there was 223 packages to be removed. I looked at those and pretty much all of them were libs and then a couple of programs. 904 packages to be upgraded (among them various gdm) and 212 newly installed, this got me GDM working.Unfortunately Unity my prefered DE doesn't start now. So I have that to resolve.
View PC info
View PC info
Today the devs fixed problem with Unity. The packages didn't show up yet in apt, but I couldn't wait so I downloaded them manually and installed with
sudo apt install (and drag and drop of packages onto terminal)
so I didn't have to type to much.https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/noble-changes/2024-April/036273.html
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-session/46.0-1ubuntu3/+build/28041509
Also the big churn of updates is over. I have upgraded all of the packages, there are still some in regards to t_time transition that show up and I have 3 held packages.