Just wanted to add that this affected me also. I've been aware for many months that support for 32-bit Ubuntu has been dropped. So, I was surprised when I started up this system I use only for backups to see the following message on the console:
====
New release '20.04.1 LTS' available.
Run 'do-release-upgrade' to upgrade to it.
=====
Running do-release-upgrade produces:
=====
Sorry, no more upgrades for this system
There will not be any further Ubundo-release-upgradetu releases for this system's
'i386' architecture.
Updates for Ubuntu 18.04 will continue until April 2023.
=====
Seems odd to get a message telling me to perform an upgrade, then when doing that, to be told no upgrade is available. Why not just display the second message initially and save me the trip through do-release-upgrade?
Just wanted to add that this affected me also. I've been aware for many months that support for 32-bit Ubuntu has been dropped. So, I was surprised when I started up this system I use only for backups to see the following message on the console:
==== upgrade' to upgrade to it.
New release '20.04.1 LTS' available.
Run 'do-release-
=====
Running do-release-upgrade produces:
=====
Sorry, no more upgrades for this system
There will not be any further Ubundo- release- upgradetu releases for this system's
'i386' architecture.
Updates for Ubuntu 18.04 will continue until April 2023.
=====
Seems odd to get a message telling me to perform an upgrade, then when doing that, to be told no upgrade is available. Why not just display the second message initially and save me the trip through do-release-upgrade?