Well, this is embarrassing. I found in the bash history that I ran this:

apt install -t bookworm-backports linux-image-amd64 linux-headers-amd64

but I have no idea why. The timestamp of the deb file is July 18. I don't remember why I did this. Getting old sucks. Looking at the history, it looks like at the time I was having problems with pulseaudio, and it being replaced by pipewire.

Sorry to sound so lame, but I do I remove the backport such that it goes back to the stock Bookworm kernel?

Rick

On 2024-09-06 14:12, Anssi Saari wrote:
Rick Macdonald <rickm...@shaw.ca> writes:

I'm running an up-to-date Bookworm desktop. I have an NVIDIA GeForce
GTX 760 (192-bit) using the NVIDIA Driver Version 470.256.02, coming
from the nvidia-tesla-470 packages. I've searched this list and the
package pages and don't see any bugs reported.

The 6.10.6 image fails to build:

Errors were encountered while processing:
  linux-image-6.10.6+bpo-amd64
  linux-image-amd64
  linux-headers-6.10.6+bpo-amd64
  linux-headers-amd64
Is there some reason to run the backport kernel? Maybe just run with the
stock Bookworm kernel and consider upgrading hardware before Trixie?



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