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You might want to compare your .bashrc file with the default one. Sorry for having to use an image and link but for some reason the forum is not letting me post the code. Anyway... follow the link and the instructions.
https://www.dbts-analytics.com/exambrcll7.html
TC
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.
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Thank you.
There ist only a /etc/bash.bashrc in my system (none in ~) and it doesn't look like this.
Since the terminal issue was not the only one, I am convinced that something went wrong with my installation.
It's not such a big problem, the system I have now is fair enough. Thanks to everyone!
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Is this an installation in a virtualization system i/e qemu/kvm, virtual-box, virt-manager, vmware, gnome-boxes, or hyper-v? If so did you remove the media (ISO file) after installation before rebooting? Files suffixed with .rc with some exceptions generally don't end up in /etc anymore (since systemd), though they can appear there in builds of ISOs and sometimes conkyrc exceptions. I'm puzzled with your results using the installer, and curious what specific method you used, and on what particular hardware, and to what end. Something you did caused /Home not to set up properly.
TCÂ
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.
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06-09-2024, 03:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-09-2024, 03:17 PM by l3onidas.)
I installed on the physical machine, no virtualization.
The hardware is an old iMac (2013, Intel). On this hardware I had already running different systems (Ubuntu, Mint) without problems.
And it was nothing special what I did. Everything I did I did already hundreds of times before without any problems.
I think the separate home partition (but, as said before, formatted during installation!) might cause problems here.
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Assuming it's UEFI which it probably is, and it previously had Mint installed on it, and you did not erase and install to the whole disk, the UEFI partition is dirty or overrun/out of space.
TC
All opinions expressed and all advice given by Trinidad Cruz on this forum are his responsibility alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or methods of the developers of Linux Lite. He is a citizen of the United States where it is acceptable to occasionally be uninformed and inept as long as you pay your taxes.
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06-09-2024, 04:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-09-2024, 04:08 PM by l3onidas.)
It is true with Mint, yes.
I will give it a try. But now I don't have time. I will report here later. Thank you!
I would prefer not to erase the whole disk. Do you think it would be enough to have the EFI Partition formatted?