Well after a few days of not being able to run any upgrades on my installed copy
of Ubuntu 8.04 LTS, last night things started moving. The upgrade process from
Ubuntu 8.04 LTS to Ubuntu 8.10 took all of last night (I started it around 9PM)
and on through this morning due to some interactive dialogs. The upgrade went
surprisingly well compared to my previous Ubuntu upgrades (most of which ended
up with me doing a clean install). This upgrade was not without it’s
complications though.
First and foremost, the Ubuntu Studio menu refused to upgrade at all. I know
it’s not a package maintained by Canonical, but it was a flat out failure when
trying to upgrade it. I proceeded with the rest of the upgrade, and then went on
to remove all of the Ubuntu Studio packages I had installed previously, and then
reinstall them. No issues with the Ubuntu Studio menu on reinstall.
Next came Compiz Fusion / Emerald Theme Manager. Compiz was running prior to the
upgrade, and after the upgrade as well but Emerald Theme Manager was not
running. After some Googling I found a nice forum
post that outlined the
uninstall and reinstall steps. Still no dice until after I started Emerald Theme
Manage with the —replace flag. In hindsight, I should have just tried that
first, I ran emerald
from the command line, but didn’t include the —replace
flag, so that would have saved a bit of time. Long story short, Compiz Fusion
with Emerald Theme Manager is back and I installed the Compiz Fusion Icon to
help troubleshooting in the future.
At this point, my desktop is looking good and my window decorations are solid,
“I wonder if my local development environment is hosed,” I thought. Sure as
shit, it was, and kind of baffling to boot. Apache 2 was up and running but all
of my virtual hosts were pulling up the default document root. This was a
surprisingly easy fix once I started digging into the Apache error log. Seems
the way I had my virtual hosts set up, as <VirtualHost *> was not accurate
compared to the NameVirtualHost directives in apache2.conf. I went ahead and
added NameVirtualHost * to the end of apache2.conf and restarted. Now all my
sites are up and running.
On top of doing the upgrade, I made the decision to (yet again) remove KDE
entirely from my system. I wasn’t entirely sure of the entire list of packages
to remove, so I used Synaptic’s section list and removed everything from all
three KDE Desktop Environment sections. There are a small list of packages still
installed when I search for “KDE” but it’s not enough to force me to put any
more efforts into it. I’ll elaborate more on why I continue to go back to GNOME
after numerous attempts with KDE on another day.
So that was my upgrade in a nutshell, most of it was just waiting, but the
outcome was well worth it. I’m hoping that my next upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04 next
year will be even easier as I really don’t have the time in my life to spend 10
hours trying to troubleshoot something that should just work (my Gentoo and
Slackware days are long over).