sudo apt update is not working [duplicate]

I have unistalled and reinstalled the Ubuntu Software Center as per info I found in a similar thread and I got the same response about line 91 or something like that.

I just tried to upload a screen shot but since I'm new it won't allow me to. I also can not figure out how to cut and paste anything so I have to hand type what the error screen says, both when I attempt to open the software center and nothing happens, when I try to enter commands into the terminal to uninstall, reinstall, whatever I get the same following:

COULD NOT INTITIALIZE THE PACKAGE INFORMATION
An unresolvable problem occured while initializing the package information
Please report t:his bug against the 'update-manager' package and include the
following error message:
'E: Malformed line 91 in source list/etc/apt/sources.list (dist parse) 
E: The list of sources could not be read., 
E: The package list of status file could not be parsed or opened.

How do I report bugs? What can be done about this. I have searched and everything everyone says to do leads me back to the same line error message.

So, I don't know how to get to line 91 in the source list; to tell you what it says. Sorry, I'm really new to this. That is what I need is to find out how to get there and fix what it says. I would really like to NOT have to re partition my hard drive and start from scratch, so I'm really looking forward to getting this problem solved. I need to be able to install new software.


Some lines are broken in your sources.list file (or another *.list file in sources.list.d/).

Edit the file mentioned in the error to fix the broken lines.

  1. To do this, run this command (press Ctrl+Alt+T to open a Terminal):

    sudo -H gedit /etc/apt/sources.list
    

    Or, instead of Gedit (which not all Ubuntu systems have), you might prefer to open the file an a terminal-based text editor:

    sudoedit /etc/apt/sources.list
    

    If necessary, replace /etc/apt/sources.list with another file name, i.e., the path to some file inside /etc/apt/sources.list.d/.

  2. Find the lines which are incorrectly formatted (refer to the error for a line number, then look around that point). These are examples of correctly formatted lines:

    # Comment, marked by a line starting with '#'
    deb http://site.example.com/debian distribution component1 component2 component3
    deb-src http://site.example.com/debian distribution component1 component2 component3
    

    The URL, distribution and components will be different. It does not necessarily have to have 3 components.

    Anything which doesn't fit this format is incorrect.

  3. Save the file and quit the text editor. Then run this command in a Terminal window:

    sudo apt-get update
    

Assuming there are no errors, the problem is now fixed. You should be able to run the Sofware Center.

However, while some problems with the Software Center can be solved by reinstalling the software-center package, most cannot, so it's possible your original problem will remain. If that is the case, you can post a new question to get help with it.


Quick Method

A workaround for this problem can be building the sources.list entry from scratch.

deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise main universe restricted multiverse
deb-src http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise universe main multiverse restricted

deb http://security.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ precise-security universe main multiverse restricted
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise-updates universe main multiverse restricted
deb http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise-backports universe main multiverse restricted

# deb http://archive.canonical.com/ubuntu precise partner
# deb-src http://archive.canonical.com/ubuntu precise partner

# deb http://extras.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise main
# deb-src http://extras.ubuntu.com/ubuntu precise main
  • Copy the above content (in grey box) and open the sources.list file as root.

    Typing sudo -H gedit /etc/apt/sources.list this in a terminal and hitting Enter will do the job.

  • Then paste the copied content in the sources.list - note you probably will need to replace precise with the codename representing your Ubuntu version - e.g. trusty for 14.04. Then save and close gedit.

  • Then do sudo apt-get update and you will see that the repository list is updated.

Explanation: Here we are completely replacing the content with another sources.list file with repository entry from Main Server. If you want to use your local server for sources.list see the method below.

Recommended Method

Go to the Ubuntu sources list generator site.

  • Select your country.
  • Select your desired branches, such as Main, Restricted, Multiverse, Universe.
  • Select desired update list, -
  • Select any third party repository list if you wish.
  • Click Generate list at the bottom of the page, you will be given a list with repositories.
  • Copy that list and replace with sources.list file you have.

You are done. (I hope this will help.)