Hi,
I recently installed Linux Mint Xfce on my old Toshiba laptop (it requires a light distro), and although I knew it would be a bit adventurous for someone without much experience of Linux like me, I thought it would be a good way to learn. The first two updates I did went right (although the last one changed bits of my "Menu" - no big deal), then things got more complicated.
So, after the first two updates (done with Update Manager), I realised the way I had initially partitioned my HDD was not right, and I figured the easiest way was to reinstall. The install went well but then I wanted to update the system - that's where things went wrong. There was about 600 updates totalling 400+ Mb. That was a big load making particularly hard to figure where the problem came from.
I understand that before updating one should always look at possible breakage issues. I try to read the thread on that topic but due to its "conversational" nature it is very hard to go through it and find relevant informations. I think it would be very convenient if it had sub-sections labelled according to the problem at issue.
Also, I have not found any way to organise the list of updates (in Update Manager) in a chronological way. Is there a way to backtrack and cancel an update if it causes problem?
I try to use Synaptic and found that many of the updates are actually "optional" while others are "important". I guess some are security related updates. Is there any (simple) way, in Update Manager and Synaptic, to filter updates according to their importance? I mean, why do I need to update? (1) for security reasons, (2) because it makes my system work more efficiently, (3) it fixes parts that do not work properly or are broken. But if my system works well, it is just about points (1) and (2) really. I understand that an "optional" upgrade is of the second category, and if everything works well I should only worry about the "important" updates.
In the Update Manager, do all Level 3 updates end up in Level 2 at some point? (Meaning they've been tested). Should I only update with Level 1 and 2 upgrades?
I understand I might be out of my league here but in any case, thanks for the advices and help, and thank you for the good work done with Linux Mint.





