On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 04:16:31PM +0100, cagsm wrote:
On Thu, Jan 27, 2022 at 9:36 PM Dave Howorth <dave@howorth.org.uk> wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jan 2022 18:37:40 +0100 Stephan Hemeier <Sauerlandlinux@gmx.de> wrote:
https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1195142 Reading that, am I misunderstanding? What I think after reading is that: -1- there is a regression bug that causes boot failure for various types of machine -2- there are more or less awkward workarounds for at least some machines -3- there's no plan to release an update
when will there be a fixed kernel update released? all my systems except for the manual hosed and temp fixed one are nonpatched kernel wise. is leap users always out in the rain? seems we are cannon fodder for the SLES big blokes :( nice shiny distro you built ontop of the suffering open source userbase you have there.
why are we opensuse users this much neglected? when a serious package release gets hosed up, why does it seemingly take ages and a pretty intransparent course as seen from the normal user base to even cope and understand what or if anything will be happening and dealt with to make things work again? i am not talking workarounds or dirty manual hacks. I am talking fixing things and releaseing at least booting kernel packages. thats what they are actually for, arent they? thats a pretty bare minimum thing in my universe to achieve. am I wrong? kernel package? release from a distro vendor? if it aint booting from one release to the next, why not immeditely return back to your desk, but instead continue to pour rotton packages on your userbase to begin with? and why not hurriedly speedily fix it asap on the double? :(
I had the hope of getting a fixed kernel out quickly, but for SLES its slower than just doing openSUSE. Would it help to mark the old as retracted right now? Ciao, Marcus