2

Good morning,

my update manager is not showing the update to 16.04, but if I use the terminal sudo do-release-upgrade -d I'm asked to upgrade. I'm using 14.04. Is it just a matter of time or do we have to update manually?

Thanks

Seb
  • 209
  • 3
  • 10

2 Answers2

4

Updates to the newest LTS are usually offered when it hits in this case 16.04.1. This is done because LTS releases often run in production enviroments and they want stable releases.

To have a check you can simply do from terminal

do-release-upgrade -c

or

do-release.upgrade -cd

this will check if there is an actual release. If yes run the command

sudo do-release-upgrade

or respective if you did -cd

sudo do-release-upgrade -d

Using -d will get you a development version which can be an option to get the upgrade going just make sure youre getting the 16.04 and nothing else from that branch.

Videonauth
  • 33,045
  • 16
  • 104
  • 120
  • 1
    It says something like "No new release found", could it be because my Ubuntu is localized in italian? – Seb Apr 24 '16 at 09:48
  • In fact what does it tell when you use the -d option ? – Videonauth Apr 24 '16 at 09:51
  • Basically it updates everything and offers me Xenial, just as usual: obsolete package count, download size and everything... – Seb Apr 24 '16 at 09:53
  • Use the command like this `do-release-upgrade -cd` to just check which version is offered there. If its Xenial you can get the upgrade going this way. – Videonauth Apr 24 '16 at 09:54
  • With that command it says 16.04 LTS is available, but will this install a develop version or the regular one? I'm quite confused and I'm running this on my main, working laptop – Seb Apr 24 '16 at 09:56
  • The developtment version is aswell the version you would get on an iso image. – Videonauth Apr 24 '16 at 09:57
  • So this command line method is basically the same as the regular GUI one? Sorry, just gotta be safe with this one :-) – Seb Apr 24 '16 at 09:59
  • Let us [continue this discussion in chat](http://chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/38807/discussion-between-videonauth-and-seb). – Videonauth Apr 24 '16 at 10:00
2

According to the release notes:

14.04 LTS to LTS upgrades will be enabled with the 16.04.1 LTS point release, in approximately 3 months time.

This is for stability reasons, giving Canonical time to iron out bugs in the new release, and in the upgrade process.

Bryan Wyatt
  • 116
  • 1
  • 6
  • 2
    Point release already happened now, the Wiki shows the 16.04.1 release, still the GUI shows only 15.10 as an available upgrade. `do-release-upgrade -cd` shows 16.04 LTS as the available upgrade. – karatedog Jul 25 '16 at 11:29
  • @karatedog if it's showing 15.10 then th'art on **15**.04, not **14**.04, and skipping intermediate releases is only possible when *both* starting *from* an LTS release and going *to* **another** LTS release. To get to 16.04 from 15.04 it will be necessary to go via 15.10. – Darael Aug 08 '16 at 22:40
  • @Darael problem solved, I was too impatient. The Xubuntu team asked for a few days to complete work on the 16.04.1 release (after the Ubuntu 16.04.1)and I just happened to install this during those day. – karatedog Aug 08 '16 at 22:58
  • @karatedog fair enough. I honestly wasn't sure if that 15 was a typo and thought I'd better note what I did in case of future readers. – Darael Aug 09 '16 at 09:47