Login loop / Intel Expired key - Ubuntu 14.04 LTSW: GPG error: message in my terminalUbuntu 14.04 desktop...
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Login loop / Intel Expired key - Ubuntu 14.04 LTS
W: GPG error: message in my terminalUbuntu 14.04 desktop does not load after loginBlack screen and login loop after updates Ubuntu 14.04 LTSLogin loop on ubuntu 14.04. Other user can log in. Checked Xauthority, and ~/.profile.Enemy Territory on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS (Dell Latitude E6440 Laptop)Stuck in Ubuntu login loop (14.04.5 LTS)Ubuntu 16.04 login loop and compizStuck in login loop Ubuntu 16.04Ubuntu 18 login loop + startx worksUbuntu 16.04 Login loop Dell 5720
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I'm stuck in a login loop with my Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and LightDM. And to be honest, I'm pretty new in Unix.
I have tried many solutions found here like removing the .Xauthority file, creating a new root user, editing the lightdm.conf file, it did not work.
So I tried to update my drivers and I got this error (trying to translate it in English, sorry) :
GPG Error, https://download.01.org trusty InRelease : Following
signatures are not valid : KEYEXPIRED [...]
When I hit the "apt-key list" command, I noticed that my Intel key was expired.
Obviously, I couldn't update it the classic way, so I've checked on Internet some other ways, and I've found these commands :
wget --no-check-certificate https://download.01.org/gfx/RPM-GPG-KEY-ilg -O - | sudo apt-key add -
But it does not work, I had :
Unable to write in "-" (Success)
And as I said I'm a newbie, so I could not fix this by myself. I just tried to launch the first part of the command, and it works (I got a key), but actually I don't know where does the "-" command writes and reads... !
I've found other fixes for the drivers, like editing the file
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/intellinuxgraphics.list
But what it contains does not fit with what I've read on Internet :
deb https://download.01.org/gfx/ubuntu/14.04/main trusty main #Intel Graphics Drivers
As a desperate try, I've tried to install GNOME DESKTOP to replace LightDM :
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-gnome-desktop
But I got these errors (sorry for the translation again...) :
addgroup : No GID is available in the range 100-999 (FIRST_SYS_GID - LAST_SYS_GID)
addgroup : Le group "gdm" has not been created.
dpkg: processing error for the "gdm" package (--configure)
the sub-processus script post-installation installed returned an error with state output 1
dpkg: dependencies issues prevent the ubuntu-gnome-desktop configuration :
ubuntu-gnome-desktop depends on gdm; but :
The gdm package is not configured yet.
And so on...
Can you see anything behind all of this in all this mess ?
Thank you for your help, I'm available if you need any information !
14.04 drivers intel-graphics lightdm
New contributor
add a comment |
I'm stuck in a login loop with my Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and LightDM. And to be honest, I'm pretty new in Unix.
I have tried many solutions found here like removing the .Xauthority file, creating a new root user, editing the lightdm.conf file, it did not work.
So I tried to update my drivers and I got this error (trying to translate it in English, sorry) :
GPG Error, https://download.01.org trusty InRelease : Following
signatures are not valid : KEYEXPIRED [...]
When I hit the "apt-key list" command, I noticed that my Intel key was expired.
Obviously, I couldn't update it the classic way, so I've checked on Internet some other ways, and I've found these commands :
wget --no-check-certificate https://download.01.org/gfx/RPM-GPG-KEY-ilg -O - | sudo apt-key add -
But it does not work, I had :
Unable to write in "-" (Success)
And as I said I'm a newbie, so I could not fix this by myself. I just tried to launch the first part of the command, and it works (I got a key), but actually I don't know where does the "-" command writes and reads... !
I've found other fixes for the drivers, like editing the file
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/intellinuxgraphics.list
But what it contains does not fit with what I've read on Internet :
deb https://download.01.org/gfx/ubuntu/14.04/main trusty main #Intel Graphics Drivers
As a desperate try, I've tried to install GNOME DESKTOP to replace LightDM :
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-gnome-desktop
But I got these errors (sorry for the translation again...) :
addgroup : No GID is available in the range 100-999 (FIRST_SYS_GID - LAST_SYS_GID)
addgroup : Le group "gdm" has not been created.
dpkg: processing error for the "gdm" package (--configure)
the sub-processus script post-installation installed returned an error with state output 1
dpkg: dependencies issues prevent the ubuntu-gnome-desktop configuration :
ubuntu-gnome-desktop depends on gdm; but :
The gdm package is not configured yet.
And so on...
Can you see anything behind all of this in all this mess ?
Thank you for your help, I'm available if you need any information !
14.04 drivers intel-graphics lightdm
New contributor
If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm stuck in a login loop with my Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and LightDM. And to be honest, I'm pretty new in Unix.
I have tried many solutions found here like removing the .Xauthority file, creating a new root user, editing the lightdm.conf file, it did not work.
So I tried to update my drivers and I got this error (trying to translate it in English, sorry) :
GPG Error, https://download.01.org trusty InRelease : Following
signatures are not valid : KEYEXPIRED [...]
When I hit the "apt-key list" command, I noticed that my Intel key was expired.
Obviously, I couldn't update it the classic way, so I've checked on Internet some other ways, and I've found these commands :
wget --no-check-certificate https://download.01.org/gfx/RPM-GPG-KEY-ilg -O - | sudo apt-key add -
But it does not work, I had :
Unable to write in "-" (Success)
And as I said I'm a newbie, so I could not fix this by myself. I just tried to launch the first part of the command, and it works (I got a key), but actually I don't know where does the "-" command writes and reads... !
I've found other fixes for the drivers, like editing the file
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/intellinuxgraphics.list
But what it contains does not fit with what I've read on Internet :
deb https://download.01.org/gfx/ubuntu/14.04/main trusty main #Intel Graphics Drivers
As a desperate try, I've tried to install GNOME DESKTOP to replace LightDM :
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-gnome-desktop
But I got these errors (sorry for the translation again...) :
addgroup : No GID is available in the range 100-999 (FIRST_SYS_GID - LAST_SYS_GID)
addgroup : Le group "gdm" has not been created.
dpkg: processing error for the "gdm" package (--configure)
the sub-processus script post-installation installed returned an error with state output 1
dpkg: dependencies issues prevent the ubuntu-gnome-desktop configuration :
ubuntu-gnome-desktop depends on gdm; but :
The gdm package is not configured yet.
And so on...
Can you see anything behind all of this in all this mess ?
Thank you for your help, I'm available if you need any information !
14.04 drivers intel-graphics lightdm
New contributor
I'm stuck in a login loop with my Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and LightDM. And to be honest, I'm pretty new in Unix.
I have tried many solutions found here like removing the .Xauthority file, creating a new root user, editing the lightdm.conf file, it did not work.
So I tried to update my drivers and I got this error (trying to translate it in English, sorry) :
GPG Error, https://download.01.org trusty InRelease : Following
signatures are not valid : KEYEXPIRED [...]
When I hit the "apt-key list" command, I noticed that my Intel key was expired.
Obviously, I couldn't update it the classic way, so I've checked on Internet some other ways, and I've found these commands :
wget --no-check-certificate https://download.01.org/gfx/RPM-GPG-KEY-ilg -O - | sudo apt-key add -
But it does not work, I had :
Unable to write in "-" (Success)
And as I said I'm a newbie, so I could not fix this by myself. I just tried to launch the first part of the command, and it works (I got a key), but actually I don't know where does the "-" command writes and reads... !
I've found other fixes for the drivers, like editing the file
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/intellinuxgraphics.list
But what it contains does not fit with what I've read on Internet :
deb https://download.01.org/gfx/ubuntu/14.04/main trusty main #Intel Graphics Drivers
As a desperate try, I've tried to install GNOME DESKTOP to replace LightDM :
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-gnome-desktop
But I got these errors (sorry for the translation again...) :
addgroup : No GID is available in the range 100-999 (FIRST_SYS_GID - LAST_SYS_GID)
addgroup : Le group "gdm" has not been created.
dpkg: processing error for the "gdm" package (--configure)
the sub-processus script post-installation installed returned an error with state output 1
dpkg: dependencies issues prevent the ubuntu-gnome-desktop configuration :
ubuntu-gnome-desktop depends on gdm; but :
The gdm package is not configured yet.
And so on...
Can you see anything behind all of this in all this mess ?
Thank you for your help, I'm available if you need any information !
14.04 drivers intel-graphics lightdm
14.04 drivers intel-graphics lightdm
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 14 hours ago
user2151343user2151343
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New contributor
New contributor
If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago
add a comment |
If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago
If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago
If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago
add a comment |
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If i can't login via a gui; the first thing I do is switch to [text] terminal & login there, and check I have some disk space. A gui or graphical-desktop login will require the creation of work files which are stored in $HOME (your user directory), if there in insufficient space in $HOME (/home/$USER/ directory) the creation of work files fails & you are logged out (ie. login loop). Create space & fix. Also please note Ubuntu 14.04 (2014-April release, releases being yy.mm in format) came with 5 years of free support; and has already switched to ESM (paid support) as it's EOL end-of-month.
– guiverc
13 hours ago