It seems that in the past it was the case that if one package source
failed, then no updates would be executed by the update manager.  I'm
not certain if this issue has been fixed.

As regards the issue raised above, it does seem that simply disabling
sources/PPA's after software is already installed is a dangerous course
of action as security issues may arise.... perhaps if the first issue
was resolved, an additional step in the upgrade process to allow the
user to either re-enable, or purge sources/PPA's could be included.  Any
sources referencing the old release could be stepped forward, and
sources using a generic release ID such as Chrome would need no
modification...

Ultimately, it is obviously desirable to give the user a clean upgrade,
but perhaps not at the expense of then being exposed to major security
risk.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1683415

Title:
  do-release-upgrade unecessarily disables PPA's which are not release
  specific

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