Activity log for bug #1664438

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2017-02-14 04:29:09 Matt Hanyok bug added bug
2020-02-12 08:30:11 Mantas Kriaučiūnas bug task added gnome-control-center (Ubuntu)
2020-02-12 08:30:19 Mantas Kriaučiūnas bug added subscriber Mantas Kriaučiūnas
2020-02-12 08:30:26 Mantas Kriaučiūnas bug added subscriber Baltix GNU/Linux system developers
2020-02-12 08:30:33 Mantas Kriaučiūnas bug added subscriber Baltix GNU/Linux activists
2020-02-12 08:30:38 Launchpad Janitor gnome-control-center (Ubuntu): status New Confirmed
2020-02-12 08:30:38 Launchpad Janitor unity-control-center (Ubuntu): status New Confirmed
2020-02-12 08:30:52 Mantas Kriaučiūnas tags eoan
2020-02-12 08:31:43 Mantas Kriaučiūnas description probably a "paper cut" issue here. On 16.04. Changed the hostname of a system recently by opening the system settings tool, into details, and typing a new device name. Noticed afterwards that running sudo commands in the terminal resulted in an 'unable to resolve hostname' message, although the commands ran successfully. Checked and it looked like changing the name updates /etc/hostname as expected, but it didn't update /etc/hosts for me - it still had: 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.1.1 (old hostname) Replacing the old hostname with the new one removed the message from the terminal when running sudo commands. probably a "paper cut" issue here. Issue exist on latest Ubuntu 19.10 and older releases, like 18.04 and 16.04. Changed the hostname of a system recently by opening the system settings tool, into details, and typing a new device name. Noticed afterwards that running sudo commands in the terminal resulted in an 'unable to resolve hostname' message, although the commands ran successfully. Checked and it looked like changing the name updates /etc/hostname as expected, but it didn't update /etc/hosts for me - it still had: 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.1.1 (old hostname) Replacing the old hostname with the new one removed the message from the terminal when running sudo commands.