On 22/04/2020 14:38, Per Jessen wrote:
Guillaume Gardet wrote:
Hi,
-----Original Message----- From: Per Jessen <per@jessen.ch> Sent: 19 April 2020 10:39
Question - the multiple kernels feature ought to have retained my dtb directory contents in /boot/dtb-4.12.14-lp150.12.48/ ? Or not ?
AFAIK, there is no multiversion support for DTB. And DTB should even be kernel version agnostic, but I know this is not really the case.
Your /boot/dtb-4.12.14-lp150.12.48/ folder should have been dropped (if there was no *.old file inside) and a new /boot/dtb-4.12.14-lp150.12.82/ should have been created with the update of your DTB package. Is it missing?
Hi Guillaume
12.48 was not dropped as I had a file named *.old in there - I also had my working DTB in here, and that was gone.
The new 12.82 directory only had the openSUSE supplied DTB which does not work (sufficiently well).
I was happy when I noticed the 12.48 directory, thinking I can just quickly copy the old DTB over ....
Can you try if you put your custom dtb into /boot/dtb/current/ I suppose this directory does not get overwritten when updating the kernel. Would be nice to get feedback on this :) Regards, Matthias -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-arm+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-arm+owner@opensuse.org