Well, it’s a bug in a package installation somehow. I just tried to do a
“do-release-upgrade” on a machine running Nagios (with mysql) and it
took me a bunch of manual research and fixing. If it’s not ubuntu, it’s
mysql.
Thank you,
David Logan
> On Jul 14, 2021, at 7:59 AM, Lucas Kanash
So evidently the problem was an existing mysql.cnf with configuration
data that had been removed from this version of mysql.
NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER I think along with two other ones which I don't
remember. Something like some_cache=4m. Once I found them in the mysql
error log and removed them one by
Public bug reported:
It was a do-release-upgrade on an AWS instance
ProblemType: Package
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 20.04
Package: mysql-server-8.0 8.0.25-0ubuntu0.20.04.1
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.4.0-1051.53~18.04.1-aws 5.4.119
Uname: Linux 5.4.0-1051-aws x86_64
ApportVersion:
Public bug reported:
Ubuntu 17.04
Installing this on blank hard drive and receivedx the error:
processing triggers for initramfs-tools (0.125ubuntu9) ...
update-initramfs: Generating /boot/initrd.img-4.10.0-19-generic
gzip: stdout: No space left on device
E: mkinitramfs failure cpio 141 gzip 1
Public bug reported:
Boot partition primary 500 megs, root 225 gigs swap 2 gigs grub2
failed to install, installer crashed and exited.
amd 64 quad core processor 8 gigs ram, ddr3
Ubuntu 16.04.1 DVD installer
Chose install rather than try, then install.
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease:
.
In His Service,
David Logan
IT Tech
Hawaii Academy of Arts Sciences
Pahoa, Hawaii 96778
808-965-3730
On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 8:38 AM, Phillip Susi ps...@ubuntu.com wrote:
It appears that you chose to install grub to /dev/sdb1 and this is not
possible. You need to install it to the default