Ubuntu download file check
Everytime I follow any guide I get the error no such file or directory. The file should go to your Download directory. If its not there for some reason you can use the find command to locate it. Ubuntu Community Ask!
Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. Where are downloaded files stored? Ask Question. Asked 8 years, 3 months ago. Active 6 years, 2 months ago. Viewed 33k times. My box seems not to see these files even though I had placed them on my desktop. Where can I find them? I have found 1 main issue with this guide.
Because of this I was not able to verify my ISO using this guide. I had to google for help. But I understand Linux is free open source software. I just trying to help improve this guide to save other beginners. But instead I just got one of the two keys second one. I hope the guide will be repaired. A post was split to a new topic: Is Ubuntu vulnerable to fake keys?
Hi, I downloaded Ubuntu Studio Tried a few times. How to verify your Ubuntu download Tutorials. About the Tutorials category. I am on Windows. Installed gpg4win. So i have gpg. Depending on your platform, you may or may not need to download the public key used to authenticate the checksum file Ubuntu and most variants come with the relevant keys pre-installed. The easiest way to find out if you need the key is to run the authentication command:.
If there is no public key for Ubuntu already present, you will get an error message similar to the following:. This is actually a really useful message, as it tells us which key or keys were used to generate the signature file.
This is done with the following command. Note that the ID numbers are hexadecimal, so we prefix them with 0x :. This command should retrieve the keys we want and add them to your keyring. You should see a message like this:. If you want to know more about signing keys and trust, you can check out the Ubuntu community GPG wiki page.
Now that we have verified the checksum file was created by Ubuntu, we can check that the ISO file we downloaded matches the checksum. Then run the following commands in a terminal. If you get no results or any result other than that shown above then the ISO file does not match the checksum. This could be because the ISO has been altered, or it downloaded incorrectly - either way you should download a fresh ISO from a known good source.
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