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Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
It is sad to see many people with problems without a concrete solution (including me), hope that 2.0 fix all those issues.
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Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Somehow I just cannot believe I'm so lucky that I have not ever experienced any of the aforementioned problems. If it was somehow related to SW, shouldn't that affect me too? |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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There is one major flaw on Sailfish most users have not realized, because they should not have to! DEM CALL IT BTRFS o.= Sorry for the loud words. But every single problem i experienced on three Jolla Phones in my family and two with friends, where rooted to btrfs problems. The observation for me is, humble little i (always 5 gig space available) never had one single problem ever since jan/2014. My loving wife shooting video like there is 128gb space and my daughter downloading gigs of android games manage to destroy their devices (in their eyes) every second month. I experienced failed system updates due to btrfs, hanging and lagging ui due to btrfs, spontaneos reboots due to btrfs, and just for the sake of not writing due to btrfs a fourth time i will stop here. The main problem is that the disk is not actually full, showing up to 4gigs available but somehow cluttered from e.g. moving large files. So, please before giving up, try the btrfs balance. go Code:
devel-su Code:
btrfs-balancer allocation Code:
btrfs-balancer balance Code:
version --dup My conclusion, try in order 1. balance, 2. reinitiate last system-update. 3. factory-reset. If problems persist, it is a HW defect and still worth a try on warranty. |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Try version --dup in devel-su mode! Sometimes single packages of an update fail, update runs through nevertheless giving the user the impression everything went fine. You get a nice verbose output from the command. If the first attempt fails with errors, try again. I had some packages that refused to update until i tried three times. |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Actually my Pollar Cell did not deviate much from 28 degrees Celsius both reported by CSD tool and a native battery application "Charge Monitor" also shows figures hovering between 28 , 28.1 , 28.2, 28.3. I suspect this is bogus information and also you won't see your numbers change much. TEST for you: Pollar Cell vs Jolla supplied battery temp reading: -my Jolla phone running with original battery shows slightly higher than room temp ~20 degrees C under CSD tool battery info. This is coming out of sleep as it is running 1.1.9.28 in stand by to check standby time during days. So you may thin that the 28 under usage for the Pollar Cell powered one is still normal, but no... -This original battery powered phone put in de refrigerator quickly shows new figure when CSD battery test re-run: 18 degrees, then 16 etc... -The Pollar Cell powered one stays stuck on 28 degrees C after spending equal time in the refrigerator. The author of the battery comparison article could have been more clear about this... |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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Thanks! |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
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The software on your phone (or any device) consists of many components, called packages. Some are independent, others depend on each other. Each package delivers a set of files that work together to achieve a given task. Sometimes, especially during a big system update when a large number of packages are being replaced, an error can happen and some packages fail to update properly. A Sailfish update through the GUI (graphical user interface) is designed to be user-friendly, hiding most of the complexity from the user. But that comes at the cost of sometimes hiding some less serious error messages. What mosen is suggesting is that you open the terminal, type devel-su and press enter. You will be asked for the password. Then you type version --dup and press enter. This will initialize the update process again. You will need the developer mode installed to do those things. The update system knows which packages have been replaced successfully and which ones still need doing, and it will do only those. It will also give you a full screen of info you might use to resolve any problems. You may want to capture that screen and share it with us. |
Re: First thoughts about the (pre) Sailfish OS 2.0
@pichlo
Thanks ill try it, but... whats my admin password on terminal? PS: Solved... is the same as the SSH conection. |
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