I edited the new debian.sources file in /etc/apt/sources.list.d according to debian instructions, started to upgrade and successfuly upgraded to 13.0, at least core debian (can use mpv, vlc, thunar, libreoffice…)
Problem is, this notebook with debian 13.0 doesnt have a working network manager and there are still 900 packages that need upgrading.
The command I entered in the terminal: sudo systemctl status NetworkManager.service returns: unit NetworkManager.service could not be found.
I have an android phone I thought I could use as a network hotspot or maybe tether, but debian 13.0 doesnt recognize it, so I really dont know what to do
Lan cable didnt work either.
Help appreciated
ETA: THANK YOU GUYS FOR YOUR AWESOME HELP!!!
special thanks to InnerScientist and stuner for their approach but what worked was what IHave69XiBucks proposed.
Im confused about how you did a partial upgrade? Did you run full-upgrade or just upgrade? When i did it it did the entire thing in one go.
It is possible you have downloaded the new network manager package but not installed it. I would try to run
sudo apt --fix-broken install
sudo apt full-upgrade
and see if it can install anything that is pre-downloaded. This may fix your network issues. If not it’ll be a much more annoying fix.
No luck
Alright try to plug in the ethernet cable and run
ip link show
sudo dhclient eth0 (Replace “eth0” with your interface name check with
ip link
)If you see the interface, but its not managed run
sudo ip link set eth0 up
sudo dhclient eth0
(Once again use the interface from ip link)
Assuming you have network connection again run
sudo apt install --reinstall network-manager
sudo systemctl enable --now NetworkManager
If all that works run
sudo apt update
sudo apt full-upgrade
sudo apt autoremove
If that doesn’t work run
journalctl -b -p 3 --no-pager
and tell me what that says
sudo dhclient eth0
you.saved.the.day
thanks!!!
Glad it worked for you! Make sure to check over everything, and make sure the install finished correctly. You might have other broken packages too.
I used sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y
Yeah for like a normal update youd do just upgrade but for a full version upgrade you should be running full-upgrade. It gets rid of conflicts, and goes deeper than the normal upgrade. Just for future reference.