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Hello all,
About a week ago I've updated packages of KDE Neon User LTS to latest using
And later I discover the following problem: I'm not able to unlock session using graphic lockscreen. It's just show me a black screen with text, that I should go to virtual terminal Ctrl+Alt+F2, enter the command
to unlock the screen. It's inconvenient to use. Also, when I up laptop from sleep mode, I got an error that
And GE starts from scratch. There are packages which were updated:
By the way, I saw the sddm login screen whensystem starts after reboot or shutdown. I even updated to latest kde neon 5.10 (from user edition, not LTS). But got the same. I faced the same with `loginctl` once when I tried to install nvidia drivers to my home laptop, but current laptop has intel video card, and I'm not update the driver. Maybe anybody faced the same issue and found the way how to fix? |
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apt upgrade?
do you mean > apt full-upgrade |
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No, I meant `apt upgrade`
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Check the apt manpage for the difference between 'upgrade' and 'full-upgrade'.
All those I know who use apt only use 'full-upgrade' to be confident that their system is fully updated, ie no packages held back for some reason. |
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I'm old school, I guess.
For refreshing the sources, I use
And for updating
And it works. "sudo reboot" is also useful ![]() I suppose it would be useful if someone just posted 2 official commands. What the ... it's not rocket science. I've been visiting this forum for months and there's still talk about what command to use to update the system. Really.
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The difference is
`upgrade` - updates system via installing and updating packages (is used to install available upgrades of all packages currently installed on the system from the sources configured via sources.list(5). New packages will be installed if required to statisfy dependencies, but existing packages will never be removed. If an upgrade for a package requires the remove of an installed package the upgrade for this package isn't performed.) `full-upgrade` -updates system via installing, updating, and removing packages. By the way, there are no packages to install when I run full-upgrade |
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To refresh sources
To update system
sudo apt upgrade - updates system via installing and updating packages - new packages will be installed if required to satisfy dependencies, but existing packages will never be removed - packages that require the removal of other packages in order to update will be ignored sudo apt full-upgrade - updates system via installing, updating and removing* packages *if those packages have become unnecessary and/or prevent other packages from updating PS: Thank you Stafox. If we need to edit it a thousand times, then so be it. Seems okay to me. What do you think? I want it perfect so that every noob, including myself, can understand it. @cbartels? What do you think? Correct or incorrect? @miladramzy Yes/No? @Somebody really knowledgeable Yes/No?
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I found the solution. Just reinstall wayland.
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