Miguel A. Vallejo wrote: >> I think it is important to find the appropriate kernel version for your >> system - the one that has all the bits and bolts for your hardware. I >> doubt I will move to newer kernel. This one seems to have all the fixes >> at least for the hardware I am using now and especially the gpu part. I >> also had freezes few years ago and followed the kernel releases until >> 4.9.25. > > That makes me wonder: What is the right way to do that in Debian? In > stable releases there is no way to use another kernel except from > backports (and they are newer, not older). And in testing / unstable > the kernels disapears as new kernels get into. How to install and keep > an old kernel in a new instalation? > > Thanks
unpack the kernel cp /boot/config-<whatever> .config make oldconfig make deb-pkg dpkg -i ...