Nautilus crash error after login. (18.10, 64 bit)
Every time I log into my Ryzen 3 HP Laptop, the "Report a problem" dialogue shows. The error message is as follows.
Sorry, Ubuntu 18.10 has experienced an internal error.
▼ ExecutablePath
/usr/bin/nautilus
▼ Package
nautilus 1:3.30.0-0ubuntu1~cosmic1 [origin: LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging]
▼ProblemType
Crash
▼Title
nautilus crashed with signal 5 in g_initable_new_valist()
There's more of course, but it's quite a large output, so I'm not going to type the whole thing here. If you need specific lines, just ask.
Could you please tell me how to stop this? Nautilus won't launch, and it is quite annoying.
Also, if I try to open it from the command-line, I get this:
(nautilus:16566): Tracker-ERROR **: 19:14:27.855: Unable to find default domain ontology rule /usr/share/tracker/domain-ontologies/default.rule
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
Please help.
gnome 18.04 nautilus crash 18.10
add a comment |
Every time I log into my Ryzen 3 HP Laptop, the "Report a problem" dialogue shows. The error message is as follows.
Sorry, Ubuntu 18.10 has experienced an internal error.
▼ ExecutablePath
/usr/bin/nautilus
▼ Package
nautilus 1:3.30.0-0ubuntu1~cosmic1 [origin: LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging]
▼ProblemType
Crash
▼Title
nautilus crashed with signal 5 in g_initable_new_valist()
There's more of course, but it's quite a large output, so I'm not going to type the whole thing here. If you need specific lines, just ask.
Could you please tell me how to stop this? Nautilus won't launch, and it is quite annoying.
Also, if I try to open it from the command-line, I get this:
(nautilus:16566): Tracker-ERROR **: 19:14:27.855: Unable to find default domain ontology rule /usr/share/tracker/domain-ontologies/default.rule
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
Please help.
gnome 18.04 nautilus crash 18.10
add a comment |
Every time I log into my Ryzen 3 HP Laptop, the "Report a problem" dialogue shows. The error message is as follows.
Sorry, Ubuntu 18.10 has experienced an internal error.
▼ ExecutablePath
/usr/bin/nautilus
▼ Package
nautilus 1:3.30.0-0ubuntu1~cosmic1 [origin: LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging]
▼ProblemType
Crash
▼Title
nautilus crashed with signal 5 in g_initable_new_valist()
There's more of course, but it's quite a large output, so I'm not going to type the whole thing here. If you need specific lines, just ask.
Could you please tell me how to stop this? Nautilus won't launch, and it is quite annoying.
Also, if I try to open it from the command-line, I get this:
(nautilus:16566): Tracker-ERROR **: 19:14:27.855: Unable to find default domain ontology rule /usr/share/tracker/domain-ontologies/default.rule
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
Please help.
gnome 18.04 nautilus crash 18.10
Every time I log into my Ryzen 3 HP Laptop, the "Report a problem" dialogue shows. The error message is as follows.
Sorry, Ubuntu 18.10 has experienced an internal error.
▼ ExecutablePath
/usr/bin/nautilus
▼ Package
nautilus 1:3.30.0-0ubuntu1~cosmic1 [origin: LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging]
▼ProblemType
Crash
▼Title
nautilus crashed with signal 5 in g_initable_new_valist()
There's more of course, but it's quite a large output, so I'm not going to type the whole thing here. If you need specific lines, just ask.
Could you please tell me how to stop this? Nautilus won't launch, and it is quite annoying.
Also, if I try to open it from the command-line, I get this:
(nautilus:16566): Tracker-ERROR **: 19:14:27.855: Unable to find default domain ontology rule /usr/share/tracker/domain-ontologies/default.rule
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
Please help.
gnome 18.04 nautilus crash 18.10
gnome 18.04 nautilus crash 18.10
edited Nov 8 '18 at 0:13
Alex Lucas
asked Nov 8 '18 at 0:07
Alex LucasAlex Lucas
62
62
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
There are some issues with the Nautilus package in the gnome-staging PPA at the moment. A hint is that it's looking for things in /usr/share/tracker
, installing the Gnome filesystem index tracker (https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Tracker/) from the PPA will fix this:
apt install tracker
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=909375 for some details and discussion.
add a comment |
You've installed Nautilus 3.30 from a source other than the normal Ubuntu repositories. Uninstall the nautilus files from LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging
, disable this PPA, update the software libraries, and reinstall the Nautilus files native to 18.10 cosmic.
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try runningsudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.
– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There are some issues with the Nautilus package in the gnome-staging PPA at the moment. A hint is that it's looking for things in /usr/share/tracker
, installing the Gnome filesystem index tracker (https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Tracker/) from the PPA will fix this:
apt install tracker
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=909375 for some details and discussion.
add a comment |
There are some issues with the Nautilus package in the gnome-staging PPA at the moment. A hint is that it's looking for things in /usr/share/tracker
, installing the Gnome filesystem index tracker (https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Tracker/) from the PPA will fix this:
apt install tracker
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=909375 for some details and discussion.
add a comment |
There are some issues with the Nautilus package in the gnome-staging PPA at the moment. A hint is that it's looking for things in /usr/share/tracker
, installing the Gnome filesystem index tracker (https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Tracker/) from the PPA will fix this:
apt install tracker
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=909375 for some details and discussion.
There are some issues with the Nautilus package in the gnome-staging PPA at the moment. A hint is that it's looking for things in /usr/share/tracker
, installing the Gnome filesystem index tracker (https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Tracker/) from the PPA will fix this:
apt install tracker
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=909375 for some details and discussion.
edited Jan 29 at 9:42
Kristopher Ives
2,83211324
2,83211324
answered Jan 29 at 9:28
nizmownizmow
1112
1112
add a comment |
add a comment |
You've installed Nautilus 3.30 from a source other than the normal Ubuntu repositories. Uninstall the nautilus files from LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging
, disable this PPA, update the software libraries, and reinstall the Nautilus files native to 18.10 cosmic.
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try runningsudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.
– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
add a comment |
You've installed Nautilus 3.30 from a source other than the normal Ubuntu repositories. Uninstall the nautilus files from LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging
, disable this PPA, update the software libraries, and reinstall the Nautilus files native to 18.10 cosmic.
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try runningsudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.
– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
add a comment |
You've installed Nautilus 3.30 from a source other than the normal Ubuntu repositories. Uninstall the nautilus files from LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging
, disable this PPA, update the software libraries, and reinstall the Nautilus files native to 18.10 cosmic.
You've installed Nautilus 3.30 from a source other than the normal Ubuntu repositories. Uninstall the nautilus files from LP-PPA-gnome3-team-gnome3-staging
, disable this PPA, update the software libraries, and reinstall the Nautilus files native to 18.10 cosmic.
edited Nov 9 '18 at 14:17
answered Nov 8 '18 at 1:19
heynnemaheynnema
19.3k22157
19.3k22157
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try runningsudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.
– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
add a comment |
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try runningsudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.
– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
that threw some errors during install, but I fiddled with it until it worked. However, now sometimes when I type "nautilus" into terminal, it gives a runtime error in triplicate. Only rarely though, and I can't find any correlation between each occurrence. Any idea what that's about? (Next time it happens I'll be sure to post the exact output here."
– Alex Lucas
Nov 10 '18 at 19:04
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
@AlexLucas You continue to run with an unsupported version of Nautilus... and "fiddled" it to get it to kinda work. Any problem with following my answer to solve your problem?
– heynnema
Nov 10 '18 at 19:12
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
The solution you gave didn't work. Basically said that there was a problem with the package, and it couldn't install, so I added the ppa back, and now I've fixed the occasional runtime error. Nautilus now runs fine, but I really appreciate the help.
– Alex Lucas
Nov 14 '18 at 4:39
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try running
sudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
@AlexLucas How did you fix the runtime errors? You could try running
sudo debsum -s
and see where your system stands.– heynnema
Nov 14 '18 at 14:09
add a comment |
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