These release notes document known issues with Ubuntu 9.10 and its variants.
System Requirements
The
minimum memory requirement for Ubuntu 9.10 is 256 MB of memory. Note
that some of your system's memory may be unavailable due to being used
by the graphics card. If your computer has only the minimum amount of
memory, the installation process will take longer than normal, but will
complete successfully, and the system will perform adequately once
installed.
Systems
with less memory may be able to select "Install Ubuntu" from the boot
menu to run just the installer, rather than the whole desktop, or may
be able to use the alternate install CD.
Release notes for Ubuntu 9.10 for ARM
A separate page has been made available with release notes for the developer-oriented Ubuntu 9.10 armel port. Please see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ARM/KarmicReleaseNotes for information about issues impacting installation on ARM.
Installation
Recommended packages installed by default
In
accordance with the Debian Policy Manual (which says "The 'Recommends'
field should list packages that would be found together with this one
in all but unusual installations"), the package management system now
installs packages listed in the Recommends: field of other installed
packages as well as Depends: by default. If you want to avoid this for
specific packages, use apt-get --no-install-recommends; if you want to make this permanent, set APT::Install-Recommends "false"; in /etc/apt/apt.conf. Be aware that this may result in missing features in some programs.
(This change was made in Ubuntu 8.10.)
Hibernation may be unavailable with automatic partitioning
The
default partitioning recipe in the installer will in some cases
allocate a swap partition that is smaller than the physical memory in
the system. This will prevent the use of hibernation (suspend-to-disk)
because the system image will not fit in the swap partition. If you
intend to use hibernation with your system, you should ensure that the
swap partition's size is at least as large as the system's physical
RAM. (345126)
Package list must be manually refreshed before installing drivers
The
"Hardware Drivers" tool (Jockey) requires up to date package lists
before it detects and advertises necessary driver packages. Immediately
after a new installation, these package lists will not be present.
Before running Jockey for the first time, update the package lists
using System->Administration->Software->Update Manager (on Ubuntu) or "KPackageKit" (on Kubuntu). (462704)
After
installation from the Ubuntu 9.10 Release Candidate, other installed
operating systems are not correctly displayed in the boot menu. To
correct this, users should run sudo update-grub from the
commandline after rebooting to their installed Ubuntu system. This
problem does not occur for installations from the final Ubuntu 9.10
release. (456776)
Automatic boot from a degraded RAID array not configured upon installation
The
installer option to support "boot from a degraded array" does not
properly configure the installed system. To correct this after
installation, run dpkg-reconfigure mdadm after installation and select the option again. (462258)
OEM "prepare for shipping" icon not shown in Kubuntu Netbook Edition
When
using the OEM installation option on Kubuntu Netbook Edition, no
"prepare for shipping" icon is placed on the desktop. Users who are
doing OEM installations with Kubuntu Netbook Edition can access this
feature under by choosing System->Prepare for shipping ... from the main bar. (386099)
UNR install confirmation dialog may be hidden
In
some cases, the confirmation dialog at the end of a successful Ubuntu
Netbook Remix installation will be hidden. To reach the popup window
prompting for reboot, you may click on it in the list of windows in the
top panel or press Alt-Tab until you switch to it. (462178)
Wubi using persistent storage on a USB disk
Users who wish to run Wubi from a USB disk that has persistent storage enabled will need to run it with the --force-wubi option from the Windows command line. (461566)
No installer shortcut in Ubuntu Moblin Remix developer preview
The
installer is not available as a shortcut on the welcome screen in the
Ubuntu Moblin Remix developer preview. To start the installation from a
live session, open "Install Ubuntu" under Applications > Settings. (439656)
Upgrading
Users
of Ubuntu 9.04 can upgrade to Ubuntu 9.10 by a convenient automated
process. Users of older Ubuntu releases need to upgrade to Ubuntu 9.04
first, and then to 9.10. Complete instructions may be found at http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/upgrading.
Kubuntu users can upgrade directly from Kubuntu 8.04 to Kubuntu 9.10. Users upgrading in this way are advised to also read the release notes for Ubuntu 8.10 and for Ubuntu 9.04, as the issues described there will in most cases also apply.
Setting wireless regulatory domain via module option no longer supported
Ubuntu
9.10 enables the CRDA wireless regulatory framework for controlling
which wireless channels are usable and visible in a particular
location. If you previously had to use the module option similar to
that below in /etc/modprobe.d/options to allow access to certain
channels in your locality then you may find that wireless will not
function at all:
- options cfg80211 ieee80211_regdom=EU
You should remove this kernel module option on upgrade to Ubuntu 9.10 and use the iw reg command instead.
(This change was made in Ubuntu 9.04.)
Upgrade from beta must be triggered manually
A
bug in the apt package included in the Ubuntu 9.10 Beta prevents
automatic notification of available package updates. Users who have
installed or upgraded to Ubuntu 9.10 prior to the Release Candidate
should ensure that updates are being made available by running update-manager manually, clicking Check, and installing the presented updates. (449535)
X server crashes when using a wacom tablet
The
wacom driver in Ubuntu 9.10 supports automatic configuration, but it
conflicts with manual device entries for wacom tablets in /etc/X11/xorg.conf, causing the X server to crash either on startup or shutdown. Please comment out or remove the entries from xorg.conf to get rid of the crashes. (358643)
Ubuntu Netbook Remix missing shutdown applet after upgrade
After
upgrading Ubuntu Netbook Remix, the shutdown applet may be absent from
the top panel. As a workaround, move the current applets to make some
available space on the panel, then right-click in the freed space to
add the "Indicator Applet Session" applet manually. See 461115 for detailed instructions.
Kubuntu may keep unneeded guidance power package
The
kubuntu upgrade may leave the no longer needed packages
"kde-guidance-powermanager" or "guidance-power-manager" installed.
Those can be removed.
Ctrl-Alt-Backspace disabled by default in Xorg, configured via XKB
Since
Ubuntu 9.04, the Ctrl-Alt-Backspace key combination to force a restart
of X is now disabled by default, to eliminate the problem of
accidentally triggering the key combination. In addition, the
Ctrl-Alt-Backspace option is now configured as an X keymap (XKB)
option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and allowing per-user configuration of this setting.
As a result, enabling or disabling the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace shortcut can now be done easily from the desktop.
Enabling Ctrl-Alt-Backspace for Ubuntu
Enabling Ctrl-Alt-Backspace for Kubuntu
- Click on the Application launcher and select "System Settings"
-
Click on "Regional & Language".
-
Select "Keyboard Layout".
-
Click on "Enable keyboard layouts" (in the Layout tab).
- Select the "Advanced" tab. Then select "Key sequence to kill the X server" and enable "Control + Alt + Backspace".
For further information, see: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap
Change in notifications of available updates
Ubuntu 9.10 launches update-manager
directly to handle package updates, instead of displaying a
notification icon in the GNOME panel. Users are notified of security
updates on a daily basis, but for updates that are not
security-related, users will only be prompted once a week.
Users
who wish to continue receiving update notifications in the previous
manner can restore the earlier behavior using the following command:
gconftool -s --type bool /apps/update-notifier/auto_launch false
(This change was made in Ubuntu 9.04.)
MySQL upgrade
In
Ubuntu 9.10 MySQL 5.1 has been promoted as the default MySQL server.
MySQL 5.0 is still available from the universe repository though.
Performing an upgrade via update-manager will correctly handle the
transition from MySQL 5.0 to MySQL 5.1. However using a dist-upgrade
will not: mysql-server-5.0 will be upgraded instead of being replaced
by mysql-server-5.1. If MySQL 5.0 needs to be kept the mysql-server and mysql-client packages should be removed before the upgrade is started.
MySQL Cluster setup
If MySQL has been setup to use the MySQL Cluster engine (NDB engine) upgrade to MySQL 5.1 will not work since the mysql-dfsg-5.1 packages don't support MySQL Cluster. Instead mysql-server and mysql-client
should be removed before upgrade and mysql-server-5.0 should be kept.
update-manager will automatically take care of this situation. Note
that MySQL 5.0 is in universe and thus won't have have the same
maintenance coverage as MySQL 5.1 (which is in main).
/etc/event.d no longer used
The version of upstart included in Ubuntu 9.10 no longer uses the configuration files in the /etc/event.d directory, looking to /etc/init instead. No automatic migration of changes to /etc/event.d is possible. If you have modified any settings in this directory, you will need to reapply them to /etc/init in the new configuration format by hand. (402759)
Syslog upgrade
The sysklogd package has been replaced with rsyslog. Configurations in /etc/syslog.conf will be automatically converted to /etc/rsyslog.d/50-default. If you modified the log rotation settings in /etc/cron.daily/sysklogd or /etc/cron.weekly/sysklogd, you will need to change the new configurations in /etc/logrotate.d/rsyslog. Also note that the prior rotation configurations used .0 as the first rotated file extension, and now via logrotate it will be .1.
Eucalyptus 1.5 snapshots not preserved on upgrade to 1.6
If
a system running Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud on Ubuntu 9.04 is upgraded to
Ubuntu 9.10, any existing snapshots will be unavailable after upgrade.
Users affected by this issue may wish to defer their upgrade until a
complete migration guide from Ubuntu 9.04 to Ubuntu 9.10 is made
available at http://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEC at a later time. (4298781)
Other known issues
Switching to ext4 requires manually updating grub
If you choose to upgrade your / or /boot filesystem in place from ext2 or ext3 to ext4 (as documented on the ext4 wiki), then you must also use the grub-install
command after upgrading to Ubuntu 9.04 to reinstall your boot loader.
If you do not do this, then the version of GRUB installed in your boot
sector will not be able to read the kernel from the ext4 filesystem and
your system will fail to boot.
Possible corruption of large files with ext4 filesystem
There
have been some reports of data corruption with fresh (not upgraded)
ext4 file systems using the Ubuntu 9.10 kernel when writing to large
files (over 512MB). The issue is under investigation, and if confirmed
will be resolved in a post-release update. Users who routinely
manipulate large files may want to consider using ext3 file systems
until this issue is resolved. (453579)
Ubuntu One client requires post-install upgrade
A
serious bug in the Ubuntu One client software included in Ubuntu 9.10
that could potentially result in loss of data has led to disabling file
syncing access for this client version on the Ubuntu One servers as a
precaution. Users who see a "Capabilities Mismatch" error when trying
to use Ubuntu One should install the post-release upgrade of the client
that will be made available immediately after release, fixing the
original bug and restoring file syncing access to the Ubuntu One
servers. Files are still available via the web interface at http://one.ubuntu.com.
Contact syncing and tomboy syncing services are not affected by this issue.
Upstart jobs cannot be run in a chroot
Upstart
jobs cannot be started in a chroot because upstart acts as a service
supervisor, and processes within the chroot are unable to communicate
with the upstart running outside of the chroot (430224).
This will cause some packages that have been converted to use upstart
jobs instead of init scripts to fail to upgrade within a chroot. Users
are advised to configure their chroots with /sbin/initctl pointing to
/bin/true, with the following commands run within the chroot:
dpkg-divert --local --rename --add /sbin/initctl
ln -s /bin/true /sbin/initctl
Login screen presented before optional filesystems are mounted
With the new upstart-based
boot process in Ubuntu 9.10, the X server will be started, and the
login screen launched, as soon as the core filesystems are available.
This means that optional filesystems, mounted at locations not required
for the system to boot, may not be mounted yet at login time, and may
even fail to mount in the case of a filesystem check error.
Users
who prefer the previous behavior of waiting for all filesystems to be
mounted before launching the login screen can add the bootwait option to these filesystems in /etc/fstab. (439604)
Avahi will not start if a .local domain is present
The avahi-daemon package, which implements the mDNS "zeroconf" standard, includes a check to avoid running when a conflicting .local DNS domain is present. It is reported that some ISPs advertise such a .local domain on their networks, which will leave Ubuntu 9.10 hosts unable to see names advertised on the local network (327362).
To force the use of mDNS on a network configured this way, users can run the commands:
sudo sed -i -e'/AVAHI_DAEMON_DETECT_LOCAL/s/1/0/' /etc/default/avahi-daemon
sudo service avahi-daemon start
Disabling Ralink rt2860 wifi on EeePC with Fn+F2 hotkey causes a kernel crash
Using
the Fn+F2 hotkey to disable the wireless antenna on an EeePC that uses
a Ralink rt2860 chip (EeePC 900 and 1000 series) results in a kernel
panic that will hang the system. A fix for this issue is expected to be
provided in a post-release update immediately after the Ubuntu 9.10
release. (404626)
bison webcam in MSI Wind netbook causes USB errors if not disabled
An error in the uvcvideo
driver used for the bison webcam in certain MSI Wind and related
netbooks causes USB support to fail, resulting in an inability to use
USB devices or suspend/resume the netbook. As a workaround, users can
disable the camera before boot using the Fn+F6 hotkey. (435352)
No Xv support for Intel 82852/855GM video chips with KMS
When
using the default kernel-mode-setting (KMS) option in Ubuntu 9.10,
users with Intel 82852/855GM cards will find that they are unable to
use the Xv extension for playing videos. This may show up as high CPU
usage or stuttering during video playback, or a failure to play videos
at all with some applications. As a workaround, users can add the
option nomodeset to the kernel boot options in the grub config (for GRUB 2: edit /etc/default/grub and add nomodeset to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX, then run sudo update-grub; for GRUB 1: edit /boot/grub/menu.lst and add nomodeset to the line beginning with # kopt=, then run sudo update-grub), to disable the use of KMS. (395932)
Brightness flickering on MSI Wind netbooks with KMS
A
bug in the kernel-mode-setting (KMS) brightness handling on certain MSI
Wind netbooks, including the U90, U100, and U120, results in a bad
flickering effect whenever the brightness is changed on the desktop, as
the brightness is repeatedly raised and then lowered. Users affected by
this issue can use the same workaround as described in the previous
note to disable KMS. (415023)
Kubuntu GUI package manager does not warn about installing from unsigned package repositories
The kpackagekit
package manager used in Kubuntu 9.10 does not notify users if the
packages they are installing come from repositories that are not
secured with PGP. Users who have unsigned package repositories in their
/etc/apt/sources.list configuration and wish to be informed of any packages installed from these sources should use the apt-get commandline tool as a workaround. (256245)
Amarok will not offer to download additional codecs when running Kubuntu from the live CD
When
started from the live session, Amarok will not offer to download
additional media codecs when needed, so, for example, it will be unable
to play MP3 files. This will work normally after the system is
installed to the hard disk. (362538)
Evince PDF viewer does not work for nonstandard home directories
Evince, the GNOME document viewer, now ships with an enforcing AppArmor
profile. This greatly increases security by protecting users against
flaws in the historically problematic PDF and image libraries. Users
who use a non-standard location for their home directory will need to
adjust the home tunable in /etc/apparmor.d/tunables/home. See https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingApparmor#Adjusting%20Tunables for details.
UEC may refuse to serve the first requests received after startup
On
startup a UEC system may not process requests correctly, for instance
returning "403 Forbidden" errors in response to some client requests.
This is caused by a database deadlock condition which is automatically
cleared after some retries. To workaround this issue you can restart
eucalyptus on the cluster controller by running "sudo restart
eucalyptus" after boot. (444352)
UEC Node Controller installation failure in an existing UEC
Extending
an existing Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud may fail during node controller
installation started using the "Install Ubuntu Enterprise Cloud" option
on the server CD. The node installation reports that the preseed file
cannot be downloaded from the Cluster Controller, because the wrong IP
address is used to connect to the Cluster Controller.
As a workaround for this issue, users can install a standard Ubuntu 9.10 server and then install the eucalyptus-nc
package after reboot. Additionally, the system's primary ethernet
interface will need to be configured as a bridge and the public ssh key
of the Cloud Controller's eucalyptus user will need to be manually
copied into the authorized_keys file of the Node Controller's
eucalyptus user. More detailed instructions can be found in Step 3 of
the UEC Package Install tutorial at https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UEC/PackageInstall. (458904)
Confirmation emails for new UEC users not sent
When
a new user is created in the UEC admin interface, an email is sent to
the user to confirm the registration. A bug in the smtp configuration
of UEC prevents the Cloud Controller from accepting and forwarding the
confirmation email to the end user. As a workaround, edit the postfix
configuration file /etc/postfix/main.cf on the Cloud Controller to comment out the mynetworks option and add a mynetworks_style option set to host instead:
#mynetworks = 127.0.0.0/8 [::ffff:127.0.0.0]/104 [::1]/128
mynetworks_style = host
Then reload postfix with sudo service postfix reload. (459101)
UEC user-data not usable by guest instances
When user data is passed to an instance started with euca-run-instances (using either the -d, --user-data option or the -f, --user-data-file option), the data returned at http://169.254.169.254/latest/user-data will be base64-encoded. ec2-init
is unable make use of this user data because it must be decoded before
use. A fix for this issue is expected to be provided in a post-release
update immediately after the Ubuntu 9.10 release. (461156)
Ubuntu 8.04 LTS crashes as a KVM guest when using virtio networking
Ubuntu
8.04 LTS using virtio networking as a KVM guest may crash when running
on an Ubuntu 9.10 host. As a workaround, such guests should use either
e1000 or rtl839 as the networking model. A fix for the bug is currently
in progress and will be included in an update to the qemu-kvm package
in Karmic. (458521)
Windows 7 domain member fails to authenticate to Ubuntu 9.10 Samba domain controller
After
upgrading a Samba domain controller to Ubuntu 9.10, Windows 7 domain
members will not be able to authenticate to it even if their registry
settings were modified as outlined in http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Windows7
prior to joining the Samba domain. A fix for this issue will be
provided in a post-release update immediately after the Ubuntu 9.10
release. (462626)
Samba nmbd daemon not started during boot
On an Ubuntu 9.10 system with Samba installed, the nmbd
daemon may fail to start on boot. To workaround this problem, restart
the samba service once the system has finished booting by running sudo service samba restart. A fix for this issue will be provided in a post-release update. (462169)
Sparc not supported by Ubuntu 9.10
The
upstart init system in Ubuntu 9.10 fails to work on the sparc
architecture due to an undiagnosed SIGBUS error. Users of Ubuntu on
sparc are advised to remain on Ubuntu 9.04 instead of upgrading to
9.10. Assistance in resolving this architecture-specific bug for Ubuntu
10.04 is welcome. (436758)