DataDrake

Hmmm. I figured as much. it's the only way I can get into the desktop though. Which is even more confusing, because it should be loading the same drivers as it did on the Live USB, no?

stylste

I did update the system, I installed it using a Live USB i downloaded maybe an hour before that. When you say "use the kernel you want", is it as easy as changing that string of text? How do I know what to enter? Are there other steps involved in updating the kernel? Sorry, total noob about that stuff.

    vasiliospavlos How do I know what to enter?

    Copy the kernel version you want from /boot/efi/EFI/com.solus-project
    to
    /boot/efi/EFI/loader.conf
    e.g.
    if in /boot/efi/EFI/com.solus-project folder there is kernel-com.solus-project.current.5.3.18-140
    you edit the /boot/efi/EFI/loader.conf file to read
    default Solus-current-5.3.18-140
    On the next reboot the kernel current-5.3.18-140 will be used

      stylste

      okay, so update.

      I don’t have any of those folders (except boot,
      obviously). I am nearly certain I installed with UEFI in mind but there’s a ‘grub’ folder.

      inside of ‘boot’ there are four archives which appear to be kernel names / versions.

      should I reinstall as UEFI and see if that’s the case?

      Edit: well tried reinstalling as UEFI. That was a colassal mistake. Same issue now I don’t have grub to enable ‘nomodeset’ (black screens, monitors turn off from no signal)

      edit 2: now I can’t even get past my motherboards boot screen. Cool.

      edit 3: the saga continues. I’m running the live USB. Just going to format the SSD and start over (again)

      edit 4: SSD formatted and awaiting instructions lol

      Do you have any other linux dist. instlled on your ssd now or earlier?

        Is there any other disk mounted on the system?
        Edit
        What is the output of
        lsblk
        on the teminal?

          stylste

          I got this error when running sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/nvme0n1 bs=1M

          dd: error writing '/nvme0n1': No space left on device
          1+0 records in
          0+0 records out
          0 bytes copied, 0.000540503 s, 0.0 kB/s

          edit: I just changed the command to sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/nvme0n1 bs=1M

          it appears to be running (no errors yet). In top it shows dd running at 90% CPU 🙂

          edit #2: Okay, weird, it ran for a while, but then still gave me an error:

          dd: error writing '/dev/nvme0n1': No space left on device
          953870+0 records in
          953869+0 records out
          1000204886016 bytes (1.0 TB, 932 GiB) copied, 784.706 s, 1.3 GB/s

          I'm learning a metric ton! Now what?

          Install nvme-cli to check your disk for errors
          sudo eopkg install nvme-cli
          and run it
          sudo nvme smart-log /dev/nvme0n1

            It did not like that. TON of "failed" errors when installing the pkg. Like, dozens.

            Says no space left on device. Going to reboot live USB and try again.

            stylste

            here's the output from sudo nvme smart-log /dev/nvme0n1

            critical_warning : 0
            temperature : 45 C
            available_spare : 100%
            available_spare_threshold : 10%
            percentage_used : 0%
            data_units_read : 17,305
            data_units_written : 2,058,962
            host_read_commands : 241,815
            host_write_commands : 2,122,446
            controller_busy_time : 14
            power_cycles : 24
            power_on_hours : 1
            unsafe_shutdowns : 10
            media_errors : 0
            num_err_log_entries : 33
            Warning Temperature Time : 0
            Critical Composite Temperature Time : 0
            Temperature Sensor 1 : 45 C
            Temperature Sensor 2 : 54 C
            Thermal Management T1 Trans Count : 0
            Thermal Management T2 Trans Count : 0
            Thermal Management T1 Total Time : 0
            Thermal Management T2 Total Time : 0

            stylste

            output appears to be the same

            Smart Log for NVME device:nvme0n1 namespace-id:ffffffff
            critical_warning : 0
            temperature : 45 C
            available_spare : 100%
            available_spare_threshold : 10%
            percentage_used : 0%
            data_units_read : 17,312
            data_units_written : 2,058,962
            host_read_commands : 241,954
            host_write_commands : 2,122,446
            controller_busy_time : 14
            power_cycles : 24
            power_on_hours : 1
            unsafe_shutdowns : 10
            media_errors : 0
            num_err_log_entries : 34
            Warning Temperature Time : 0
            Critical Composite Temperature Time : 0
            Temperature Sensor 1 : 45 C
            Temperature Sensor 2 : 54 C
            Thermal Management T1 Trans Count : 0
            Thermal Management T2 Trans Count : 0
            Thermal Management T1 Total Time : 0
            Thermal Management T2 Total Time : 0

            same output as last time:
            dd: error writing '/dev/nvme0n1': No space left on device
            953870+0 records in
            953869+0 records out
            1000204886016 bytes (1.0 TB, 932 GiB) copied, 759.482 s, 1.3 GB/s

            I'm trying to understand exactly what this is doing, so let me break it down, tell me where I'm wrong.

            I'm formatting an empty drive that's never had anything but 2 previous installations of Solus on it in order to get properly load the amdgpu drivers so two monitors will display. And now this brand new Samsung EVO 970 is broken? Which is why we're checking using nvme?