I got no updates since many weeks by the updater applet in the system tray.(?)
And can somebody please point me to a good explanation of the difference between update/upgrade/dist-upgrade in general and what it means especially for LMDE?
Greetings,
S.
No updates since weeks
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LMDE 2 has reached end of support as of 1-1-2019
LMDE 2 has reached end of support as of 1-1-2019
No updates since weeks
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: No updates since weeks
I'll assume you're talking about the apt-get command.
- Update updates your package index. Almost no chance of breaking your system.
- Upgrade upgrades your system, minus the kernel. Usually pretty safe. There's usually not much reason to upgrade the kernel unless something isn't working.
- Dist-upgrade upgrades everything. It also has the highest chance of breaking your system, but is still usually safe. This is what I do on my Main Edition laptop. I have completely broken it in the past by doing this.
I believe that updates for LMDE are released in "Update Packs" instead of immediately as with the main editions or Debian. If there's no update packs, then there's no updates.
- Update updates your package index. Almost no chance of breaking your system.
- Upgrade upgrades your system, minus the kernel. Usually pretty safe. There's usually not much reason to upgrade the kernel unless something isn't working.
- Dist-upgrade upgrades everything. It also has the highest chance of breaking your system, but is still usually safe. This is what I do on my Main Edition laptop. I have completely broken it in the past by doing this.
I believe that updates for LMDE are released in "Update Packs" instead of immediately as with the main editions or Debian. If there's no update packs, then there's no updates.
Re: No updates since weeks
Thank you for the fast reply.
When I decided to use LMDE for my main laptop, I was appealed by the statement that "I never have to upgrade the system again by a new install" (or something similar, dealing with a "rolling distribution").
So the question is: When do I have to do something at all?
This is more confusing to me than I thought when deciding for LMDE.
S.
When I decided to use LMDE for my main laptop, I was appealed by the statement that "I never have to upgrade the system again by a new install" (or something similar, dealing with a "rolling distribution").
So the question is: When do I have to do something at all?
This is more confusing to me than I thought when deciding for LMDE.
S.
Re: No updates since weeks
LMDE works with UP's (Update Packs) most of the time, as said before and these UP's can be huge.
LMDE isn't a real, full or true rolling release... it's a so called semi- or cyclic-rolling release, due the UP's. Sometimes a few smaller updates are available, like a newer Firefox or some small mint specific updates.
Once your Update Manager is showing a blue circle with a exlamation mark in it, you know there are updates available. May it be a few updates or a UP......
You can install LMDE once, keep it up to date and if you don't mess around with your system too much, you actually shouldn't have to install it again for a long time.
So... if you kept your LMDE up to date, you won't have to do a single thing at all if it's still working well.
LMDE isn't a real, full or true rolling release... it's a so called semi- or cyclic-rolling release, due the UP's. Sometimes a few smaller updates are available, like a newer Firefox or some small mint specific updates.
Once your Update Manager is showing a blue circle with a exlamation mark in it, you know there are updates available. May it be a few updates or a UP......
You can install LMDE once, keep it up to date and if you don't mess around with your system too much, you actually shouldn't have to install it again for a long time.
So... if you kept your LMDE up to date, you won't have to do a single thing at all if it's still working well.
Re: No updates since weeks
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.p ... 8&t=112836simplex wrote:And can somebody please point me to a good explanation of the difference between update/upgrade/dist-upgrade in general and what it means especially for LMDE?
(there's a couple links in there that might be also interesting)
when you are prompted to update; lmde uses update-packs, doesn't update every day >> http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=197&t=91405simplex wrote:So the question is: When do I have to do something at all?
Re: No updates since weeks
Since weeks, thunderbirds pops up a window saying "new update to 17.0.4" is available. When I press the update button, nothing happens. Also the LMDE updater does not update to a newer version. How can this be explained?
Re: No updates since weeks
The updates are released as update packs. This includes Thunderbird and the LMDE updater. If you want to update to the latest version of thunderbird, you will have to do it manually. Or you can use Icedove from the Mozilla Debian repositories. The same is true of Firefox/Iceweasel. They are essentially the same programs with differences you won't notice in normal use.simplex wrote:Since weeks, thunderbirds pops up a window saying "new update to 17.0.4" is available. When I press the update button, nothing happens. Also the LMDE updater does not update to a newer version. How can this be explained?
Re: No updates since weeks
Mozilla changed to a short release cycle. Firefox and Thunderbird can manage their own updates, instead of relying on distro maintainers.simplex wrote:Since weeks, thunderbirds pops up a window saying "new update to 17.0.4" is available. When I press the update button, nothing happens. Also the LMDE updater does not update to a newer version. How can this be explained?
I had this symptom with Thunderbird. My fix was to change the owner of the folder.
Code: Select all
$ sudo chown -R $(whoami):$(whoami) /opt/thunderbird
# assuming the folder is owned by root, but needs to be owned by my user
# perform the update, then change back
$ sudo chown -R root:root /opt/thunderbird
Re: No updates since weeks
But I suppose you have to apply this fix every time Thunderbird/Firefox releases a new subversion?
Re: No updates since weeks
once you own that folder, updating FF/TB will not make you lose ownership. I would again recommend Iceweasel and Icedove if you want to use the package manager.
http://mozilla.debian.net/
http://mozilla.debian.net/