On 15/04/14 11:44, Linux Canuck wrote:
>
>
> You cannot remove the upgrade easily and it can cause more problems than
> it resolves. The likely cause is a partial upgrade. I would try to fix
> that instead.
>
> To remove the upgrade you would have to know which packages were
> upgraded, then completely remove them with the package manager (Synaptic
> has this option or try the commands below). Then you have to change your
> settings to always prefer the installed version instead of the higher
> version. Then re-install the packages. Even after all of this, it may
> not work.
The key is the dmesg command it displays the 'boot up' log which should
list the problem. There is a lot of it so pipe it to more to scroll
through to find the issue.
--
Trevor
E-mail Trevor@nb-ladynada.co.uk
Rovert.nosraep@gmail.com
trev15evil@yahoo.co.uk
trevorpearson03@btinternet.com
trevor.pearson@bcs.org
Skype rovertsky
Web Site www.nb-ladynada.co.uk
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