Hi,
Just wanted to add my report of yet another unfortunate experience with 9.04->9.10 network upgrade on a live system. Similar to what others posted here, my system also ended up with the upgrade manager GUI hung and completely unresponsive somewhere 10% into installation of the downloaded packages. After killing its window I was able to sort of force through manual upgrade with several repeated cycles of 'apt-get dist-upgrade' followed by 'dpkg --configure -a' in a console, however, the result was less than satisfactory. I had all sorts of weird problems with that system, so I decided to back up my home directory and reinstall from scratch. Which went perfectly smooth and the Karmic install I am now enjoying looks rather impressive. However, for the sake of others considering upgrade I should say:
UPGRADE TO KARMIC IS UNRELIABLE AND LIKELY TO FAIL!
Stay away from it unless you know what you are doing and are able to fix things that might break apart in the process. At least do not forget to back up all your personal data before proceeding with it. Along with any important settings you might want to save for later perusal, e.g. your /etc directory...
Hope this helps
Just wanted to add my report of yet another unfortunate experience with 9.04->9.10 network upgrade on a live system. Similar to what others posted here, my system also ended up with the upgrade manager GUI hung and completely unresponsive somewhere 10% into installation of the downloaded packages. After killing its window I was able to sort of force through manual upgrade with several repeated cycles of 'apt-get dist-upgrade' followed by 'dpkg --configure -a' in a console, however, the result was less than satisfactory. I had all sorts of weird problems with that system, so I decided to back up my home directory and reinstall from scratch. Which went perfectly smooth and the Karmic install I am now enjoying looks rather impressive. However, for the sake of others considering upgrade I should say:
UPGRADE TO KARMIC IS UNRELIABLE AND LIKELY TO FAIL!
Stay away from it unless you know what you are doing and are able to fix things that might break apart in the process. At least do not forget to back up all your personal data before proceeding with it. Along with any important settings you might want to save for later perusal, e.g. your /etc directory...
Hope this helps
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