Roger,
Thank you.
I guessed that sudo was missing was part of it but I thought there was a problem with the keys which might be important. "not ultimately trusted keys found"
Robert
gpg: key 886DDD89: public key "deb.torproject.org archive signing key" imported gpg: no ultimately trusted keys found gpg: Total number processed: 1 gpg: imported: 1 (RSA: 1) root@LXI:~# gpg --export A3C4F0F979CAA22CDBA8F512EE8CBC9E886DDD89 | sudo apt-key
On Sat, Apr 11, 2015 at 05:11:41PM -0800, I wrote:
-bash: sudo: command not found
Looks like you might want to "apt-get install sudo".
That said, if you're running the command as root already, you can just omit the 'sudo' word.
Once you have done the apt-get sudo, do a 'man sudo' and you can read about what it is. It is one of the simple and pervasive unix commands that all sysadmins tend to know about -- but it is a tiny bit tricky here because Ubuntu basically forces you to know about it in order to do anything, whereas Debian doesn't.
Hope that helps, --Roger
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