Question #76777 on Ubuntu changed:
https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+question/76777
Status: Open => Answered
marcobra (Marco Braida) proposed the following answer:
The "dpkg --configure -a" is asked by the system when a previous update/upgrade
process have not completely performed good, and it must run with "root"
privileged administrative user.
Using the "sudo" command we can do a command as "root" user, and "dpkg
--configure -a" need be run from root user.
After the "dpkg --configure -a" command i add all the usual commands (see
below) you can run to be sure your system became fully upgraded.
Please also subscribe this bug https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source
/update-manager/+bug/108601/
Typing the commands as sudo the system will ask you for a password,
please give your user password when requested, you don't see nothing
when you type it, then press enter.
So please be sure your system is fully updated/upgraded with no pending
packages or errors:
Open a Terminal from the menu Applications → Accessories → Terminal and type:
(if the system ask you a password give your user password, you will not see
nothing when you type it, then press enter)
sudo dpkg --configure -a
then to update and upgrade and also check pending or missing packages,
still using terminal type:
sudo apt-get -f install
sudo apt-get --fix-missing install
sudo apt-get clean
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade
sudo apt-get clean
sudo apt-get autoremove
Hope this helps
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