I’m on debian 11, this error doesn’t show up every time, but once it appear I need more that one reboot and it will fix automatically without doing nothing, don’t know the reason why (just read that can be kernel dependent). What I want to avoid is that maybe it’s just a warning of somethink that will cause a pc break in future (maybe hardware is starting working bad?) Do you have any sugggestion? Thanks

  • KISSmyOS@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I think the newer kernel should work after reinstallation.
    If it doesn’t and you want to stay with the older one:

    apt list --installed linux-image*

    There should be a package with a specific version number in its name. For example, the standard kernel for Debian 11 is:
    linux-image-5.10.0-26-amd64

    Uninstall the linux-image-... package you don’t want to keep.
    Also uninstall linux-image-amd64 which is the meta-package that pulls in the newest kernel version. Without it, you won’t get new kernel versions in upgrades.