Cannot update Logitech Unifying Receiver (version of org.freedesktop.fwupd incorrect: failed predicate [0.9.2...












1















There's security update for the Logitech Unifying Receiver (see Screenshot).



Ubuntu Software Screenshot



Clicking the button does nothing.



I came across this post https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/109038/logitech-unifying-receiver-security-update/
Updating via command line doesn't work either



$ sudo fwupdmgr update
Downloading RQR12.07_B0029 for Unifying [runtime]...
Updating RQR12.07_B0029 on Unifying [runtime]...
Decompressing…
version of org.freedesktop.fwupd incorrect: failed predicate [0.9.2 ge 0.8.1]


The only Google result for the error message is https://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2017/05/22/updating-logitech-hardware-on-linux/ . But the comment mentioning it doesn't look resolved.



So how do I install the update? Correct me if I'm wrong, but 0.9.2 is greater than or equal 0.8.1 which means the predicate check is just broken?



$ sudo apt-get -s upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculating upgrade... Done
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.









share|improve this question

























  • device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 16:59











  • You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:05











  • in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:12






  • 1





    Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

    – Prinzhorn
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:44











  • Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:56
















1















There's security update for the Logitech Unifying Receiver (see Screenshot).



Ubuntu Software Screenshot



Clicking the button does nothing.



I came across this post https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/109038/logitech-unifying-receiver-security-update/
Updating via command line doesn't work either



$ sudo fwupdmgr update
Downloading RQR12.07_B0029 for Unifying [runtime]...
Updating RQR12.07_B0029 on Unifying [runtime]...
Decompressing…
version of org.freedesktop.fwupd incorrect: failed predicate [0.9.2 ge 0.8.1]


The only Google result for the error message is https://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2017/05/22/updating-logitech-hardware-on-linux/ . But the comment mentioning it doesn't look resolved.



So how do I install the update? Correct me if I'm wrong, but 0.9.2 is greater than or equal 0.8.1 which means the predicate check is just broken?



$ sudo apt-get -s upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculating upgrade... Done
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.









share|improve this question

























  • device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 16:59











  • You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:05











  • in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:12






  • 1





    Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

    – Prinzhorn
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:44











  • Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:56














1












1








1








There's security update for the Logitech Unifying Receiver (see Screenshot).



Ubuntu Software Screenshot



Clicking the button does nothing.



I came across this post https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/109038/logitech-unifying-receiver-security-update/
Updating via command line doesn't work either



$ sudo fwupdmgr update
Downloading RQR12.07_B0029 for Unifying [runtime]...
Updating RQR12.07_B0029 on Unifying [runtime]...
Decompressing…
version of org.freedesktop.fwupd incorrect: failed predicate [0.9.2 ge 0.8.1]


The only Google result for the error message is https://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2017/05/22/updating-logitech-hardware-on-linux/ . But the comment mentioning it doesn't look resolved.



So how do I install the update? Correct me if I'm wrong, but 0.9.2 is greater than or equal 0.8.1 which means the predicate check is just broken?



$ sudo apt-get -s upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculating upgrade... Done
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.









share|improve this question
















There's security update for the Logitech Unifying Receiver (see Screenshot).



Ubuntu Software Screenshot



Clicking the button does nothing.



I came across this post https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/109038/logitech-unifying-receiver-security-update/
Updating via command line doesn't work either



$ sudo fwupdmgr update
Downloading RQR12.07_B0029 for Unifying [runtime]...
Updating RQR12.07_B0029 on Unifying [runtime]...
Decompressing…
version of org.freedesktop.fwupd incorrect: failed predicate [0.9.2 ge 0.8.1]


The only Google result for the error message is https://blogs.gnome.org/hughsie/2017/05/22/updating-logitech-hardware-on-linux/ . But the comment mentioning it doesn't look resolved.



So how do I install the update? Correct me if I'm wrong, but 0.9.2 is greater than or equal 0.8.1 which means the predicate check is just broken?



$ sudo apt-get -s upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculating upgrade... Done
0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.






logitech-unifying fwupd






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 12 '17 at 17:42







Prinzhorn

















asked Sep 12 '17 at 16:51









PrinzhornPrinzhorn

301513




301513













  • device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 16:59











  • You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:05











  • in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:12






  • 1





    Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

    – Prinzhorn
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:44











  • Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:56



















  • device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 16:59











  • You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:05











  • in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:12






  • 1





    Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

    – Prinzhorn
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:44











  • Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

    – Panther
    Sep 12 '17 at 17:56

















device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 16:59





device can not be used during update ? Download the .deb, shut down, remove hardware, reboot and either update or install the .deb . Not really sure what hardware that is so not sure what ubuntu package that is exactly.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 16:59













You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:05





You may need to file a bug report against the ubutnu package.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:05













in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:12





in a terminal type sudo apt-get -s upgrade and post the output.

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:12




1




1





Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

– Prinzhorn
Sep 12 '17 at 17:44





Added the output of sudo apt-get -s upgrade. It is a firmware update, hence removing the hardware does not work as it needs to be plugged in to update the firmware. Also removing the hardware removes the update (fwup depetects the connected hardware).

– Prinzhorn
Sep 12 '17 at 17:44













Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:56





Does it still show as an available update in software center ? You may need to file a bug report against fwupdmgr

– Panther
Sep 12 '17 at 17:56










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














I've opened an issue with fwupd. You need fwudp 0.9.2 or greater to update. Ubuntu 17.04 ships with 0.8.1. One solution is to use a live USB of a distribution such as Xubuntu 17.10 b1 which has a more recent version in its repositories. Since it is a firmware upgrade you can use the other distro to update the Unifying Receiver and then boot back into your normal system.




  • get a bootable USB disk with a distro containing a current version (I went with Xubuntu 17.10 b1, which currently has fwupd 0.9.7). Note that you probably want a 64-bit version of the OS - 32-bit fwupd segfaults if device is plugged in.

  • boot the live distro

  • plug in the receiver

  • apt update

  • apt install fwupd

  • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

  • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update


Source: https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/253#issuecomment-329755909






share|improve this answer


























  • Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

    – doug
    Sep 23 '17 at 21:16





















2














I only did a simple search for fwupd from Ubuntu software and installed fw-uefi-tools and then fwupd.
This solved the problem (for me on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS).



(thanks to Chai T. Rex and zx485)






share|improve this answer


























  • I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

    – JayDin
    Dec 30 '18 at 22:03



















0














On Ubuntu 18.04 I was able to get past this by following the last two steps of Prinzhorn's answer on my running machine with no extra live CD boot. I did not verify that the edit step is strictly necessary, I just did it and it worked.




  • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

  • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    I've opened an issue with fwupd. You need fwudp 0.9.2 or greater to update. Ubuntu 17.04 ships with 0.8.1. One solution is to use a live USB of a distribution such as Xubuntu 17.10 b1 which has a more recent version in its repositories. Since it is a firmware upgrade you can use the other distro to update the Unifying Receiver and then boot back into your normal system.




    • get a bootable USB disk with a distro containing a current version (I went with Xubuntu 17.10 b1, which currently has fwupd 0.9.7). Note that you probably want a 64-bit version of the OS - 32-bit fwupd segfaults if device is plugged in.

    • boot the live distro

    • plug in the receiver

    • apt update

    • apt install fwupd

    • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

    • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update


    Source: https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/253#issuecomment-329755909






    share|improve this answer


























    • Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

      – doug
      Sep 23 '17 at 21:16


















    3














    I've opened an issue with fwupd. You need fwudp 0.9.2 or greater to update. Ubuntu 17.04 ships with 0.8.1. One solution is to use a live USB of a distribution such as Xubuntu 17.10 b1 which has a more recent version in its repositories. Since it is a firmware upgrade you can use the other distro to update the Unifying Receiver and then boot back into your normal system.




    • get a bootable USB disk with a distro containing a current version (I went with Xubuntu 17.10 b1, which currently has fwupd 0.9.7). Note that you probably want a 64-bit version of the OS - 32-bit fwupd segfaults if device is plugged in.

    • boot the live distro

    • plug in the receiver

    • apt update

    • apt install fwupd

    • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

    • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update


    Source: https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/253#issuecomment-329755909






    share|improve this answer


























    • Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

      – doug
      Sep 23 '17 at 21:16
















    3












    3








    3







    I've opened an issue with fwupd. You need fwudp 0.9.2 or greater to update. Ubuntu 17.04 ships with 0.8.1. One solution is to use a live USB of a distribution such as Xubuntu 17.10 b1 which has a more recent version in its repositories. Since it is a firmware upgrade you can use the other distro to update the Unifying Receiver and then boot back into your normal system.




    • get a bootable USB disk with a distro containing a current version (I went with Xubuntu 17.10 b1, which currently has fwupd 0.9.7). Note that you probably want a 64-bit version of the OS - 32-bit fwupd segfaults if device is plugged in.

    • boot the live distro

    • plug in the receiver

    • apt update

    • apt install fwupd

    • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

    • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update


    Source: https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/253#issuecomment-329755909






    share|improve this answer















    I've opened an issue with fwupd. You need fwudp 0.9.2 or greater to update. Ubuntu 17.04 ships with 0.8.1. One solution is to use a live USB of a distribution such as Xubuntu 17.10 b1 which has a more recent version in its repositories. Since it is a firmware upgrade you can use the other distro to update the Unifying Receiver and then boot back into your normal system.




    • get a bootable USB disk with a distro containing a current version (I went with Xubuntu 17.10 b1, which currently has fwupd 0.9.7). Note that you probably want a 64-bit version of the OS - 32-bit fwupd segfaults if device is plugged in.

    • boot the live distro

    • plug in the receiver

    • apt update

    • apt install fwupd

    • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

    • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update


    Source: https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/253#issuecomment-329755909







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Sep 24 '17 at 9:47

























    answered Sep 23 '17 at 19:29









    PrinzhornPrinzhorn

    301513




    301513













    • Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

      – doug
      Sep 23 '17 at 21:16





















    • Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

      – doug
      Sep 23 '17 at 21:16



















    Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

    – doug
    Sep 23 '17 at 21:16







    Worked ok here using my 17.10 install. Maybe consider mentioning user has to run a command to get it. (unless it shows up in software manager, didn't here.) I used sudo fwupdmgr update

    – doug
    Sep 23 '17 at 21:16















    2














    I only did a simple search for fwupd from Ubuntu software and installed fw-uefi-tools and then fwupd.
    This solved the problem (for me on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS).



    (thanks to Chai T. Rex and zx485)






    share|improve this answer


























    • I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

      – JayDin
      Dec 30 '18 at 22:03
















    2














    I only did a simple search for fwupd from Ubuntu software and installed fw-uefi-tools and then fwupd.
    This solved the problem (for me on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS).



    (thanks to Chai T. Rex and zx485)






    share|improve this answer


























    • I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

      – JayDin
      Dec 30 '18 at 22:03














    2












    2








    2







    I only did a simple search for fwupd from Ubuntu software and installed fw-uefi-tools and then fwupd.
    This solved the problem (for me on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS).



    (thanks to Chai T. Rex and zx485)






    share|improve this answer















    I only did a simple search for fwupd from Ubuntu software and installed fw-uefi-tools and then fwupd.
    This solved the problem (for me on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS).



    (thanks to Chai T. Rex and zx485)







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Oct 18 '18 at 10:06

























    answered Oct 16 '18 at 18:28









    LeleLele

    212




    212













    • I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

      – JayDin
      Dec 30 '18 at 22:03



















    • I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

      – JayDin
      Dec 30 '18 at 22:03

















    I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

    – JayDin
    Dec 30 '18 at 22:03





    I only installed fwupd (v 1.1.4) from Ubuntu Software and the problem was immediately fixed on 16.04. There was no need for me install fw-uefi-tools.

    – JayDin
    Dec 30 '18 at 22:03











    0














    On Ubuntu 18.04 I was able to get past this by following the last two steps of Prinzhorn's answer on my running machine with no extra live CD boot. I did not verify that the edit step is strictly necessary, I just did it and it worked.




    • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

    • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.

























      0














      On Ubuntu 18.04 I was able to get past this by following the last two steps of Prinzhorn's answer on my running machine with no extra live CD boot. I did not verify that the edit step is strictly necessary, I just did it and it worked.




      • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

      • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.























        0












        0








        0







        On Ubuntu 18.04 I was able to get past this by following the last two steps of Prinzhorn's answer on my running machine with no extra live CD boot. I did not verify that the edit step is strictly necessary, I just did it and it worked.




        • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

        • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        On Ubuntu 18.04 I was able to get past this by following the last two steps of Prinzhorn's answer on my running machine with no extra live CD boot. I did not verify that the edit step is strictly necessary, I just did it and it worked.




        • edit /etc/fwupd/remotes.d/lvfs-testing.conf - change Enabled=false to Enabled=true

        • fwupdmgr refresh && fwupdmgr update







        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer






        New contributor




        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered Mar 12 at 19:12









        Jeff BennettJeff Bennett

        1




        1




        New contributor




        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        Jeff Bennett is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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