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You need to peek at the multiple logs if present, and search for google-chrome in the texts and see if they contain any info about the package, if they go back far enough.. It may not be worthwhile, as you can simply reinstall it from apt or from Discover. It might be interesting to see if and when it was uninstalled, and what may have caused this to happen, though.
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Thank you claydoh. I found it.
I installed exfat utlils in order to read the NTFS usb stick where I had all of my media and such stored. Exfat evidently doesn't play nice with Chrome.
from history.log
Start-Date: 2019-02-11 22:48:20
Install: exfat-utils:amd64 (1.2.8-1), exfat-fuse:amd64 (1.2.8-1, automatic)
Remove: google-chrome-stable:amd64 (72.0.3626.96-1)
End-Date: 2019-02-11 22:48:24
From term.log
Log started: 2019-02-11 22:48:20
(Reading database ...
(Reading database ... 5%
[user removed repetitive 5% increments]
(Reading database ... 100%
(Reading database ... 223836 files and directories currently installed.)
Removing google-chrome-stable (72.0.3626.96-1) ...
Selecting previously unselected package exfat-fuse.
(Reading database ...
(Reading database ... 5%
[user removed repetitive 5% increments]
(Reading database ... 100%
(Reading database ... 223730 files and directories currently installed.)
Preparing to unpack .../exfat-fuse_1.2.8-1_amd64.deb ...
Unpacking exfat-fuse (1.2.8-1) ...
Selecting previously unselected package exfat-utils.
Preparing to unpack .../exfat-utils_1.2.8-1_amd64.deb ...
Unpacking exfat-utils (1.2.8-1) ...
Setting up exfat-utils (1.2.8-1) ...
Setting up exfat-fuse (1.2.8-1) ...
Processing triggers for mime-support (3.60ubuntu1) ...
Processing triggers for man-db (2.8.3-2ubuntu0.1) ...
Log ended: 2019-02-11 22:48:24
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostCopy the log file(s) found in the directory to somewhere in your home directory.
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Copy the log file(s) found in the directory to somewhere in your home directory.
If it just a log file double click it and it will open in a text editor.
If it is a tar or gz or bz2 file, these are like zip files. Right click and use the extract function to get the text files out.
You can look for items visually or use the text editor's search to look for any instances of "google-chrome" and see if and when it was uninstalled.
If it was somehow deleted (not uninstalled) from /opt it would still show as installed when using the apt policy command. For you it shows as not installed, which means it was uninstalled or was never installed to begin with (obviously not the case here).
What we hope to see is when it was uninstalled and what may have caused it to happen.
Sent from my LG-H931 using Tapatalk
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostThey are text files, some of them are compressed so can be opened with Ark. You search the text for 'google-chrome' and see if any action involving that is present.
Would you please walk me through ?
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They are text files, some of them are compressed so can be opened with Ark. You search the text for 'google-chrome' and see if any action involving that is present.
It is highly strange that the entire directory holding Chrome would simply disappear. It would take root privileges (and thus authorization) so a logical place to look is the logs.
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I'm going to retract my earlier statement about Chromium pulling settings from Chrome. They were not there last night. It's possible that I opened Firefox by mistake, saw the installed plugins, and made a dumb assumption. I still often get confused about where I am in Linux. My Windows reflexes play tricks on my perceptions.
But Chrome is definitely gone.
I don't have sync turned on.
About those logs you mentioned, if you tell me how or where to fetch them, and exactly what you need, I will fetch them.
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But Chromium doesn't read/share Google Chrome's folder in ~/.config. It has its own.
If anyone with a Google account signs in and doesn't turn off sync, the new browser, Google Chrome or Chromium, will be synced.
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Originally posted by TwoFistedJustice View PostChrome is gone. But Chromium somehow was able to import my settings from the ghost of Chrome.
Is it possible that Chrome is still there but I can't see or access it?
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Originally posted by chimak111 View PostMaybe it was "sync" doing its stuff?
Also, if you have inxi installed, the output of inxi -Fxrz may reveal something.
We probably need to see the apt logs ( /var/log/apt/) to see when (and maybe why) Chrome was uninstalled
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Originally posted by TwoFistedJustice View PostChrome is gone. But Chromium somehow was able to import my settings from the ghost of Chrome.
Is it possible that Chrome is still there but I can't see or access it?
Also, if you have inxi installed, the output of inxi -Fxrz may reveal something.Last edited by chimak111; Feb 14, 2019, 11:54 PM.
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Originally posted by Snowhog View PostWhat PC? Do you have more than one HDD in it? Is it possible that the application was installed to another drive (if you have more than one)?
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Chrome is gone. But Chromium somehow was able to import my settings from the ghost of Chrome.
Is it possible that Chrome is still there but I can't see or access it?
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What PC? Do you have more than one HDD in it? Is it possible that the application was installed to another drive (if you have more than one)?
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