On Mon, Apr 20, 2009 at 8:43 AM, Jeremy <tclug at lizakowski.com> wrote:
>
> I was using the Ubuntu Jaunty Alpha's, and they were better and more stable
> than Intrepid.  It's a good upgrade from Intrepid.
>
> However, just before the beta, the last alpha I believe, an update rendered
> the computer non-bootable.  I tried booting from the CD, then chroot to the
> partition.  I told dpkg to finish whatever it was doing - no change.  I suspect
> an apt-get upgrade might fix it, but that would require more than a chroot to
> get network access and all the config files mounted.
>
> Is it worthwhile to use the CD, go to init 1, chroot, then go to init 3, and
> try run apt?  Will that get the network running in the chroot jail?
>
> Or, would it be faster to backup our home directories (less than 1GB) and
> resinstall?  I'm leaning towards that solution, since this machine needs to be
> running.
>
> Jeremy
> Yes, I know, it said not to use alphas with a production box...

I'd go with the backup and reinstall route.  You'll have less downtime
that way, and way less frustration.

-- 
Tony Yarusso
http://tonyyarusso.com/