On 10/10/2015 09:33 PM, Piyavkin wrote:
Yeah, but if the issue becomes permanent in all the future versions
starting from 3.2.71-2? It's kind of scary.
Good news: After some time waiting, there came version 3.2.73-2 and I
tested it both with 686-rt and 486 flavors. Both work good. No proble
On 10/10/2015 09:33 PM, Piyavkin wrote:
Miroslav, by the way, what version of BIOS your laptop has?
Insyde F15
On 10.10.2015 22:06, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
On 10/09/2015 08:45 PM, Piyavkin wrote:
I have exactly the same issue with the same kernel-packages. See here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/10/msg00231.html
Yes, my symptom was identical to what you have described there.
Interestingl
On 10.10.2015 22:06, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
On 10/09/2015 08:45 PM, Piyavkin wrote:
I have exactly the same issue with the same kernel-packages. See here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/10/msg00231.html
Yes, my symptom was identical to what you have described there.
Interestingl
On 10/09/2015 08:45 PM, Piyavkin wrote:
I have exactly the same issue with the same kernel-packages. See here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/10/msg00231.html
Yes, my symptom was identical to what you have described there.
Interestingly you use GRUB and not LILO, but even your GR
On 10/09/2015 06:09 PM, Brad Rogers wrote:
If that's true, that's a *serious* bug. LILO (or Grub, come to that)
should never delete kernels. I know Grub doesn't but, as I said before,
I've not used LILO for some years. Even so, I'd be surprised if it could
actually _delete_ kernels like that
On 10/09/2015 05:19 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
In fact, (and in my case) LILO does delete old kernels during the upgrade,
Wow! I really think that is a bug *if* it does. What makes you think
that is the case?
Ok, let me say it this way: That laptop has 2 different flavours of
kernel, the
I've reported the bug here:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=801467
#801467
Thanks for help.
Best regards,
Dmitry Piyavkin
On 10/9/2015 9:09 AM, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Thu, 8 Oct 2015 23:09:36 +0200
Miroslav Skoric wrote:
Hello Miroslav,
In fact, (and in my case) LILO does delete old kernels during the
If that's true, that's a *serious* bug. LILO (or Grub, come to that)
should never delete kernels. I know Gru
On Fri, 09 Oct 2015 21:45:19 +0300
Piyavkin wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> I have exactly the same issue with the same kernel-packages. See here:
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/10/msg00231.html
>
> I use Grub. But it hadn't saved old good kernel versions in the exactly
> same manner
> as
Hi there,
I have exactly the same issue with the same kernel-packages. See here:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2015/10/msg00231.html
I use Grub. But it hadn't saved old good kernel versions in the exactly
same manner
as Miroslav's LILO does. I have no option «Advanced options for Debian
On Thu, 8 Oct 2015 23:09:36 +0200
Miroslav Skoric wrote:
Hello Miroslav,
>In fact, (and in my case) LILO does delete old kernels during the
If that's true, that's a *serious* bug. LILO (or Grub, come to that)
should never delete kernels. I know Grub doesn't but, as I said before,
I've not us
On Thu, Oct 08, 2015 at 11:09:36PM +0200, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
> On 10/08/2015 12:37 AM, Brad Rogers wrote:
>
> >>Thanks. Well I do not have GRUB here but LILO, and there are no saved
> >>old kernels as long as I know.
> >
> >There should be; Debian doesn't delete old kernels as part of the
> >
> Furthermore, as mentioned in my other mail, I used to have 486 and
> 686-pae kernels, and was used to switch from one to another from time to
> time, to see the difference. In the past I noticed that 686-pae tend to
> make mouse cursor moving slowly for a while, then to recover as usual,
> th
On 10/08/2015 12:37 AM, Brad Rogers wrote:
Thanks. Well I do not have GRUB here but LILO, and there are no saved
old kernels as long as I know.
There should be; Debian doesn't delete old kernels as part of the
upgrade process. Even LILO should have an option to boot older
kernels. Older ker
On 10/08/2015 10:58 AM, Riley Baird wrote:
rescue CLI?
If dpkg is available during the rescue CLI, you can install the .deb file
using the command
$ dpkg -i /path/to/packagename.deb
Riley, that was the solution I looked for and dpkg did the job. I
reinstalled the previous kernel and remov
On Wed, 7 Oct 2015 23:23:54 +0200
Miroslav Skoric wrote:
> On 10/07/2015 08:56 AM, Riley Baird wrote:
>
> >> After the last kernel update and restart, a wheezy-based machine (laptop
> >> running 7.9) boots to some point, however it freezes just before opening
> >> GUI. Access to CLI (Ctrl-Alt-F1
On Wed, 7 Oct 2015 23:23:54 +0200
Miroslav Skoric wrote:
Hello Miroslav,
>Thanks. Well I do not have GRUB here but LILO, and there are no saved
>old kernels as long as I know.
There should be; Debian doesn't delete old kernels as part of the
upgrade process. Even LILO should have an option t
On 10/07/2015 08:56 AM, Riley Baird wrote:
After the last kernel update and restart, a wheezy-based machine (laptop
running 7.9) boots to some point, however it freezes just before opening
GUI. Access to CLI (Ctrl-Alt-F1 etc) is also not possible. What to do to
recover?
Debian saves your old k
On Wed, 07 Oct 2015 06:44:37 +0200
Miroslav Skoric wrote:
> Hi,
>
> After the last kernel update and restart, a wheezy-based machine (laptop
> running 7.9) boots to some point, however it freezes just before opening
> GUI. Access to CLI (Ctrl-Alt-F1 etc) is also not possible. What to do to
>
Hi,
After the last kernel update and restart, a wheezy-based machine (laptop
running 7.9) boots to some point, however it freezes just before opening
GUI. Access to CLI (Ctrl-Alt-F1 etc) is also not possible. What to do to
recover?
Regards,
M.
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