On Jo, 07 ian 21, 09:37:10, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
On 07/01/2021 01:06, deloptes wrote:
Ottavio Caruso wrote:
In this case, what's the oldest kernel I can install on Stretch?
you mean the most recent?
No, I mean the opposite. The oldest that can be installed on Stretch Because
I didn't have a problem with older kernels. I must have uninstalled some of
the oldest kernel I had. At the moment I have:
$ dpkg -l|grep linux-image
ii linux-image-4.19.0-0.bpo.9-amd64 4.19.118-2+deb10u1~bpo9+1
amd64 Linux 4.19 for 64-bit PCs (signed)
ii linux-image-4.9.0-11-amd64 4.9.189-3+deb9u2 amd64
Linux 4.9 for 64-bit PCs
ii linux-image-4.9.0-12-amd64 4.9.210-1+deb9u1 amd64
Linux 4.9 for 64-bit PCs
ii linux-image-4.9.0-14-amd64 4.9.246-2 amd64 Linux
4.9 for 64-bit PCs
ii linux-image-amd64 4.19+105+deb10u4~bpo9+1
amd64 Linux for 64-bit PCs (meta-package)
Typically a Debian release should run with the kernel from the previous
release (makes dist-upgrade easier), specific exceptions are mentioned
in the Release Notes.
If possible you should stick with kernels from the LTS project (as far
as I know stretch is still supported).
For testing purposes you can find all Debian packages ever uploaded to
the archive at https://snapshot.debian.org.