@chipaca I have sent the system logs to the manufacturere and waiting for a response.
I will give you a follow up as soon as I get a reply.
Thank you for the help.
@chipaca I have sent the system logs to the manufacturere and waiting for a response.
I will give you a follow up as soon as I get a reply.
Thank you for the help.
hola a mi se me soluciono ese problema con esto comandos:
espero que te sirva
if anything does not work after all of above steps then just restart snap service using the following command
systemctl restart snapd
I think there was a bug. I fixed it by installing a newer version of snapd.
$ sudo dpkg -i https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/snapd_2.37.1_amd64.deb
$ sudo apt-get install -f
$snap version
worked correctly after this.
I got the release info from https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/snapd
I am running Ubuntu 16.04 LTS.
Hi;
Just for the record, I had a similar problem and it turned out to be lack of space for the root directory:
$ df -kh
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /dev
tmpfs 378M 8.9M 369M 3% /run
/dev/mmcblk0p3 350M 343M 0 100% /writable
/dev/loop0 92M 92M 0 100% /
/dev/loop1 155M 155M 0 100% /lib/modules
tmpfs 1.9G 4.0K 1.9G 1% /etc/fstab
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /media
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /tmp
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /mnt
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /var/lib/sudo
/dev/loop2 92M 92M 0 100% /snap/core/6531
/dev/mmcblk0p2 50M 2.3M 47M 5% /boot/efi
cgmfs 100K 0 100K 0% /run/cgmanager/fs
tmpfs 378M 0 378M 0% /run/user/1000
Don’t forget to extend the partition to use all the space on the sd-card/hard-drive.
Bests,
Vahid
I had the exact same error on Ubuntu Core.
I fixed it by flashing the SD card again with sudo dd if=myimage.img of=/dev/mydisk
as said in the documentation, but without bs=32M
.
I don’t know if removing the bs=32M
part is useful or if I’m just lucky, but after several installations I think this one is good.
the blocksize option just tells dd to cache 32MB in RAM before flushing it to disk, it does not have any effect on the actual written data (indeed, if you had less than 32MB of RAM that would have some impact, beyond this it is only speeding up the write process, nothing more … )
You’re right @ogra. I just explained what steps I followed to make it working. I think the thing was only to reburn the SD card, again.
systemctl restart snapd does the trick for me. I had snapd inactive (dead)
Me funciono a mi también. Gracias.
Thank you! Nr. 2 helped me out.
After installing snapd
(whatever your linux distro), you should reboot your pc/laptop to let the snapd
integrate with your linux system correctly.
If not, most likely you’ll end up with that kind of message.
it works for me, thanks a lot bro
This worked perfectly! Thanks so much
gracias !
for additional info :
thank you ,it is working !!!
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