Am Mittwoch, 1. Juli 2020, 13:49:02 CEST schrieb gru...@mailfence.com: I believe, the best way is just to deinstall package "linux-image-amd64".
So you can let debian the actual debian kernel installed, but it won't overwrite and renew the actual kernels at upgrade/full-upgrade. This has the advantage, you have either an old kernel at hand if something goes bad, and you can easily install a kernel from the debian repo , if needed. It is never a bad idea, to have a working kernel at hand. When you build your own kernel, take care of the version number, so that will not be overwritten by apt (if you build a kernel package of your own and not just simply built and install the kernel via a script or manually) Have fun! Best regards Hans > On Wed, 1 Jul 2020, Greg Wooledge wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 01, 2020 at 01:22:29PM +0200, gru...@mailfence.com wrote: > >> i build my kernels > >> how can i tell apt to never install a kernel when i upgrade > > > > Remove all Debian kernel packages, including and most especially > > the metapackages such as "linux-image-amd64". > > thanks > simple > like me :)
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