Hi all,
Each time I start an upgrade recommended by Adept notifier, I checked if everything is OK by displaying the detail and I noticed that I still received an error message ending with "Failed to open device". I tried to copy-paste the entire error message via the Adept's Edit menu but it doesn't contain any Cut-Copy-Paste option. Knowing that any interruption can be catched via the command line "trap", I was confident... After having selected the entire error message, I tried the Ctrl-C command during the KDE upgrade from version 3.5.8 to 4.0... and the result is an aborted KDE upgrade and the impossibility to restart Adept (I still received an error message saying that there was still was another occurence of Adept running and locking the database of packages). I decided to reboot the system and start the upgrade again.
Now, I'm indeed not able to boot the system anymore in normal mode neither in recovery mode.
I'm afraid to be forced to reinstall completely Kubuntu unless someone has a better idea. Fortunately, I store my data on other partitions than the system itself. I think that this kind of "risky" upgrade should be driven in a more secure way (catching of interruptions, backup, disaster-recovery, warning messages...).
Any help is welcome.
Each time I start an upgrade recommended by Adept notifier, I checked if everything is OK by displaying the detail and I noticed that I still received an error message ending with "Failed to open device". I tried to copy-paste the entire error message via the Adept's Edit menu but it doesn't contain any Cut-Copy-Paste option. Knowing that any interruption can be catched via the command line "trap", I was confident... After having selected the entire error message, I tried the Ctrl-C command during the KDE upgrade from version 3.5.8 to 4.0... and the result is an aborted KDE upgrade and the impossibility to restart Adept (I still received an error message saying that there was still was another occurence of Adept running and locking the database of packages). I decided to reboot the system and start the upgrade again.
Now, I'm indeed not able to boot the system anymore in normal mode neither in recovery mode.
I'm afraid to be forced to reinstall completely Kubuntu unless someone has a better idea. Fortunately, I store my data on other partitions than the system itself. I think that this kind of "risky" upgrade should be driven in a more secure way (catching of interruptions, backup, disaster-recovery, warning messages...).
Any help is welcome.
Comment