Hi Bashing-om
does this mean i should try and do a reinstall from the CD. Obviously I would lose all my data. right?? If so. Dam lol
Hi Bashing-om
does this mean i should try and do a reinstall from the CD. Obviously I would lose all my data. right?? If so. Dam lol
lcbmac; Welp:
Looks that way. If = as i keep asking -
in the CHroot environmentCode:dpkg --configure -a
has a null return. I can not conceive of a way forward.
And with the CD access enabled, will only cause additional problems IF old software is installed into the present installed system.
I had thought that you had your data copied off the install ..if that is not the case, can still be done.
It is a rare thing, but as is
I am advising to take the "nuclear solution", and
(RE-)install
It appears the install script cannot restart the service, so a brutal approach is
1) sudo apt-get install -f
2) open new terminal and type in sudo gnome-system-monitor
3) find the rsyslogd process and kill it
you'll find the apt-get command will execute and the rsyslogd process will be restarted.
done
Sorry, not too experienced with this situation in particular, but even if "dpkg --configure -a" didn't return anything, try running it and then running apt, and see if it still complains. In other words, run this from the Chroot environment:
It is essential that once the first command starts, this process should not finish until the last command completes.Code:dpkg --configure --pending apt-get -s autoremove apt-get autoclean apt-get clean apt-get update apt-get upgrade apt-get dist-upgrade apt-get -f install
-Jonathan
Status: CELEBRATING 2016!!! (Offline )
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