https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1207355 https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1207355#c3 --- Comment #3 from Takashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.com> --- (In reply to P Gillespie from comment #2)
(In reply to Takashi Iwai from comment #1)
Could you verify whether the problem persists with the old kernel found in TW history repo, too? http://download.opensuse.org/history/ At least 6.1.0 is found there.
For older version, you can find my OBS repos home:tiwai:kernel:6.0, home:tiwai:kernel:5.19, ... Note that those contain the unofficial builds, hence it won't boot with Secure Boot (without manual hacks).
Thanks. The problem has been going on since 6.1.0, so I'm apt to test with 5.x. Still somewhat new to Opensuse however. Rolling back to an earlier Kernel on Ubuntu? That I know how to do, but I haven't done this on Opensuse. Can you recommend a link or provide brief instructions?
You can install multiple kernel versions at the same time on openSUSE system. But, first off, verify whether you're using Secure Boot or not. If yes, you'd need to disable Secure Boot on BIOS at first. The way depends on the machine. Then, as a preparation, increase the number of multiple installable kernels by editing /etc/zypp/zypp.conf as root. Add more entries to the line multiversion.kernels, e.g. multiversion.kernels = latest,latest-1,latest-2,latest-3,running Now, go to the download URL. Choose x86_64 instead of i686. e.g. for 6.0, from http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/tiwai:/kernel:/6.0/standard/... and download kernel-default-6.0.*.rpm file from there. Install it via zypper, % zypper in --oldpackage kernel-default-6.0.*.rpm You'll be asked for the signature, but you can ignore it and continue. After installing, reboot, choose the kernel on GRUB menu, and retest. If the kernel isn't needed any longer, uninstall it % zypper rm kernel-default-6.0.12
I found the following at your site:
https://mirrorcache-us.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/tiwai:/kernel:/5.19/ standard/i686/
And: kernel-vanilla-5.19.12-1.1.g95fa5b8.i686.rpm
Is it simply a matter of downloading and zyppering in the RPM? Will the option to boot with 5.19 be configured in grub?
The i686 is a wrong one, that's for 32bit.
Lastly, for what it's worth, I posted this on Reddit and another user, also with an MS Go, reported the same issue.
We'd need to report this to the upstream in the end, but at first we need to figure out whether a regression and the exact regression range if so. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.