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Piske, and all:<BR>
<BR>
Thank you for the idea. This actually worked, though I had to do the same for two other packages it needed that the upgrade had taken out. <BR>
<BR>
I then went to check for updates, and found it wanted to do a "partial upgrade", which I did, in which it added a single package it needed, but then at the end insisted on removing it as obsolete. <BR>
<BR>
After which, it again wanted to do a partial upgrade, which I did, adding the same package, this time I specified to keep it. <BR>
<BR>
But after that, it wanted to do a partial upgrade again, so I concluded it was just looping wanting to do it. <BR>
<BR>
I terminated the Update Manager, did some other things, then restarted the Update Manager. It showed a whole bunch of updates (as before) that were needed, but said it needed to do a partial update first. <BR>
<BR>
I had it do a partial upgrade again, and this time, it specified probably all of the modules that supposedly got upgraded before - 488 megabytes worth. Reluctantly, I let it do its thing (tying up my wireless dongle much of the afternoon). <BR>
<BR>
However, this time, the upgrade went through to completion with no problems, and it didn't try to take out (obsolete) qjackctl this time. <BR>
<BR>
I conclude that something went wrong during the original upgrade, causing it to terminate early. That would explain why it said it was 12.04, but it still had the look-and-feel of 11.10. I recall during the upgrade process I saw a "cc1" step error off (associated with virtual box), and thought this thing wasn't even going to boot, but it did boot. <BR>
<BR>
To its credit, it did eventually get things sorted out. <BR>
<BR>
Thanks again for your tip that allowed me to restore qjackctl to operational status. <BR>
<BR>
- Aere<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
On Mon, 2012-06-18 at 20:16 +0100, Piskie wrote:<BR>
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE>
On 18/06/12 20:05, Aere Greenway wrote: <BR>
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE>
Alex:<BR>
<BR>
Thank you very much for your quick reply. <BR>
<BR>
Though I had tried to get qjackctl back after the upgrade (to 12.04) using Synaptic package manager (without success), I hadn't actually tried apt-get (what you suggested), so I quickly tried it. <BR>
<BR>
As with Synaptic Package Manager, it fails because the upgrade process for Lubuntu marks the package as obsolete. Here is what happened in my terminal session when I attempted what you suggested:<BR>
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aere@aere-Dimension-8200:~$ sudo apt-get install qjackctl<BR>
[sudo] password for aere: <BR>
Reading package lists... Done<BR>
Building dependency tree <BR>
Reading state information... Done<BR>
Package qjackctl is not available, but is referred to by another package.<BR>
This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or<BR>
is only available from another source<BR>
<BR>
E: Package 'qjackctl' has no installation candidate<BR>
aere@aere-Dimension-8200:~$ <BR>
<BR>
<BR>
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<BR>
As I stated in the e-mail, I had no problem installing it in Lubuntu 12.04 systems that were installed via the install process (rather than the upgrade process). <BR>
<BR>
Also, it isn't a problem with Ubuntu, because I did an upgrade of Ubuntu 11.10 to Ubuntu 12.04, and the qjackctl package was<I> not </I>marked obsolete, and everything is fine with my upgraded Ubuntu system. <BR>
<BR>
Since the error message above indicated the problem might be that the required software source was not allowed, I checked the software sources in the Update Manager, but it showed that all of the sources (main, universe, multiverse, and restricted) were selected. <BR>
<BR>
Unless someone has a way of removing the "obsolete" marking of this package, it appears that my only recourse is to do a fresh install of Lubuntu 12.04, and then install qjackctl. <BR>
<BR>
I was hoping there might be a way to get the package back without having to re-install the entire system. <BR>
<BR>
<BR>
- Aere<BR>
</BLOCKQUOTE>
Have you tried just downloading the package from <BR>
<BR>
<A HREF="http://packages.ubuntu.com/precise/qjackctl">http://packages.ubuntu.com/precise/qjackctl</A><BR>
<BR>
and install from a terminal, after changing to correct location, with <BR>
<BR>
sudo dpkg -i qjackctl<BR>
<BR>
Make sure you have the dependencies installed prior to that.<BR>
<BR>
Piskie<BR>
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--
Sincerely,
Aere
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