There are now errors when updating and I cannot install most software due to a corrupted
/etc/apt/sources.list
file. Is there a copy I can download to replace it?
The file would be for Ubuntu 12.04 (Final Beta) in the United States.
There are now errors when updating and I cannot install most software due to a corrupted
/etc/apt/sources.list
file. Is there a copy I can download to replace it?
The file would be for Ubuntu 12.04 (Final Beta) in the United States.
You can use this trick. Open a terminal ( Pressing Ctrl+Alt+T ) and do these
Move the corrupted one to the safe place
and recreate it
Open Software & Updates
This will open
software-properties-gtk
with no repository selected.Then, change the server to Main server or to any other server of your choice. You must enable some repositories from the new window in order to create a new
sources.list
file in/etc/apt/
.After enabling some sources from Ubuntu software tab, you can enable updates. To do so, switch to Updates tab and select one or more updates channel. I recommend selecting the security and updates channels at least. (This image is later added from Ubuntu xenial, so there can be some differences)
Updated with inline content
This is the
sources.list
file for 12.04 Precise Pangolin.If you're using another release, you need to replace the
precise
word with your Ubuntu release name. You can see which name you should use with this command:To replace the word, you can use this
sed
command (assuming you copied the sources content in/etc/apt/sources.list
):Note 1: the word
deb
anddeb-src
refers to the repository format.deb
is for binary packages anddeb-src
is for source packages.Note 2: Using
#
at the start of the line makes that line a comment.apt
will ignore it, so any repositories mentioned on that line will be disabled.Note 3: There are repository lines which includes all four components:
main
,universe
,restricted
,multiverse
. You can disable one or more of them by removing the word.Note 4: You can find some explanation of the repositories in this my other answer
For releases prior to and including 18.04, you can use https://repogen.simplylinux.ch (currently, 20.04 and later are not supported by this tool).
Select your Country and Ubuntu Release.
For the default set of repositories, you need to enable these repositories.
If you want to install software from Canonical Partner Repositories (closed source software), enable the Ubuntu Partner Repositories (both of them).
Enable any 3rd party repository you wish to enable.
Now, click the Generate List button at the bottom of that page and you'll see your generated sources.list.
Replace the old sources.list with the new one
Run the following commands in a Terminal.
Copy/paste all the text from the newly generated sources.list to this file. Save it and close Gedit.
Now, update apt.
This will update your repository index with the current sources.list and then you can install any software using Software Center, Synaptic or apt-get.
By default there will be a backup for your sources.list file on the same directory itself.
Answer from similar question here: What is the correct output of cat /etc/apt/sources.list?
Here is a better way to get all the default repositories back.
Create a directory where we can run our commands:
Download the
sources.list
for Ubuntu 20.04 focal.Change the
sources.list
to match your version:Backup your current
sources.list
:Replace the
sources.list
:Run
apt update
:By default, the directory which contains all the PPA files is empty. If after restoring the repositories, you're still facing errors then you need to remove all the PPA files too.
Move the directory containing the PPA files to the
~/answer
directory:Recreate the directory:
Run
apt update
:Remove the
~/answer
directory:If the gist file used in the
wget
command above gets removed in the future, then you can copy the contents from here: