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I have Ubuntu 19.10 and am trying to upgrade to 20.04.1. I have followed all kinds of tutorials, but in the end I am always facing the same problem. When I run
sudo do-release-upgrade
The log is:
Checking for a new Ubuntu release
Your Ubuntu release is not supported anymore.
For upgrade information, please visit:
http://www.ubuntu.com/releaseendoflife
If I run
sudo do-release-upgrade -d
The log is:
Checking for a new Ubuntu release
Upgrades to the development release are only
available from the latest supported release.
I also tried upgrading from Software Updater, and when I try to, the window just disappears. By the way, I have 1GB free memory, I don't know if this could be the problem.
P.S: The output of lsb_release -a:
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID: Ubuntu
Description: Ubuntu 19.10
Release: 19.10
Codename: eoan
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Like the title says I'm trying to install OpenHMD drivers.
I get through the build process but after running the install command I only get this output:
[0/1] Installing files.
Installing subprojects/hidapi/libhidapi.so to /usr/local/lib64
Installing libopenhmd.so.0.1.0 to /usr/local/lib64
Installing /home/rackneh/Documents/GitHub/OpenHMD/include/openhmd.h to /usr/local/include/openhmd
Installing /home/rackneh/Documents/GitHub/OpenHMD/build/meson-private/openhmd.pc to /usr/local/lib64/pkgconfig
Installing symlink pointing to libopenhmd.so.0.1.0 to /usr/local/lib64/libopenhmd.so.0
Installing symlink pointing to libopenhmd.so.0 to /usr/local/lib64/libopenhmd.so
Looks like there's no oculus drivers being installed, I'm new to Linux and I have no idea what to do..
This is the driver I'm installing: OpenHMD/Rift-kalman-filter
(Nobara distro Fedora)
If anyone can help a newbie I'd really appreciate it!
Installing the openHMD 6dof Linux drivers, I was expecting it to install the oculus drivers.
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I had sve version 1.7 installed on CentOS and now I installed svn 1.11 using following command -
sudo yum localinstall CollabNetSubversion-client-1.11.1-1.x86_64.rpm
but after hitting svn --version, it still showing 1.7 version. Please guide me to what else I need to do to use latest version 1.11 of svn.
This might be trivial question but I haven't worked on linux environment more. Please help.
You can exec command
rpm -ql CollabNetSubversion-client-1.11.1-1.x86_64
and from the list get the location of new svn. Then you can add the directory where this is installed on the first place in PATH:
export PATH=/here/is/the/location:$PATH
(and add this to ~/.bashrc also)
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It goes wrong when I reboot my CentOS7.0 system, after executing yum update -y kernel and selecting the latest kernel version during rebooting.
Executing yum update -y kernel command, the kernel version like below:
current kernel version is 3.10.0-514.el7.x86_64, and the latest version is 3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64,
After executing reboot command, I select the first kernel (the latest version),
but it goes wrong, wrong details like below:
wn-block(0,0)
CPU: 0 PID: 1 Comm: swapper/0 Not tained 3.10.0-693.2.2.el7.x86_64
Hadware name: ...
Call trace:
...
Kernel Offset: disables
My CentOS version is 7.0, and it was installed basing on VirtualBox.Why does it go wrong?
I have solved the problem, if you want to upgrade your CentOS system kernel, you must excute following steps:
excuting yum install -y kernel or yum update -y kernel command;
excuting vi /etc/default/grub command, set GRUB_DEFAULT=0, it means that the first kernel will be default kernel;
excuting grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg command(CentOS 7.0 version), it aimes to generate a new kernel configuration;
reboot your system;
Maybe I use this method just in my case, someone who have a good method can add a comment at bellow, thanks.
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Closed 5 years ago.
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I am trying to install Anaconda for Linux (Linux Mint 17.2 Rafaela, 14.04.3 LTS, Trusty Tahr).
I see a warning:
WARNING:
Machine does not appear to be ppc64le. This software was sepicically
build for POWER8 running Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.
Are sure you want to continue the installation? [yes|no]
What should I do?
Is the machine a power8 or x86? More than likely you have an x86 cpu so you need to install that version of Anaconda. Anaconda Repo. You can use the command uname -a from the command line to print the kernel version. Normally you would see something in the output that says like "x86_64".
As for the anaconda versions, notice the differences between these two file names.
Anaconda2-4.4.0-Linux-x86_64.sh
Anaconda2-4.4.0-Linux-ppc64le.sh
:::EDIT:::
Based on the your warning "WARNING: Machine does not appear to be ppc64le.", it sounds like you have an x86 cpu. To be sure, run the command uname -a.
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I have to install a package (J-Link: https://www.segger.com/jlink-software.html) into Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (Latest 64 bit (4.1.0-x86_64-linode59)), but I am not sure which one I should install:
DEB Installer 64-bit version
RPM Installer 64-bit version
TGZ archive 64-bit version
All three are possible, but
It is probably easiest to install the .deb, assuming it is appropriate for your operating system.
To check the integrity of the deb before installing:
md5sum PACKAGE.deb
and make sure the output matches the md5sum reported on the website from which you downloaded the deb.
Then to install the deb:
dpkg -i PACKAGE.deb