Let's talk about the LTS kernels
DataDrake
In Oct 2019 I got rid of Win7 and started heavy using Solus. It is working rock-solid on LTS kernel (with one issue -- display remains dark after hibernation woke).
Hardware: ThinkPad X201s
CPU: Topology: Dual Core model: Intel Core i7 L 620 bits: 64 type: MT MCP L2 cache: 4096 KiB
Graphics: Device-1: Intel Core Processor Integrated Graphics driver: i915 v: kernel
Display: x11 server: X.Org 1.20.8 driver: modesetting unloaded: fbdev,vesa resolution:
1: 1600x1200~60Hz 2: 1920x1200~60Hz
When I boot current.5.4.12-143 or current.5.6.18-155, DE in couple minutes freezes (Caps Lock LED blinking).
So I am kinda lost now...
@DataDrake, did the solus team decided to upgrade the LTS kernel or not?
Getta91 I've been in the middle of a sizable Haskell upgrade all week, so kernels haven't been on my mind. With everything else being upgraded this sync cycle I also didn't want to introduce even more churn. Based on the feedback I have received, I would like to upgrade to 4.14 for awhile while 5.4 stabilizes or the next LTS is announced, from there I will decide whether or not to upgrade to 5.4 or the latest LTS. We will skip 4.19 entirely.
@DataDrake I did resolve problem with current kernel and my ThinkPad x201s here: <https://dev.getsol.us/T9183>. Therefore I can withdraw vote for kernel 4.9 version.
I just got a tuf a15 that runs a 4800h and 2060 and Solus 4.1 won't boot (some ppm issue). The only OS that work on it are Fedora and OpenSUSE, so I am using fedora for now. But, I really want to get solus running on it. Solus saves me so much time because I can access my network folders from every piece of software because the Solus mounting utility is so easy and powerful. The OS is just a breeze. Can someone let me know if i would be able to put the iso on a USB with Balena, and the update it is live to try and get a newer kernel durring install. I think with the 4800H you need at least 5.6.3. I really can't wait until that is available with Solus OS.
PS Solus is running great on my thinkpad T450, and two T5500 with dual xeons, which is impressive range of hardware. Kudos to the people that made this!!! No more copying and pasting back and forth from network, or mounting to fstab in terminal <3
the latest kernel is 5.6.18
I've been using linux-current
from solus3 days never had any issues.
holski What you could try is install Solus in another Laptop or PC, update the system and then just swap the m.2 to your A15. Otherwise we have to wait until we get a new ISO
I just updated mine Linux Kernel and after reboot i get screen saying something bad happend with logout button.I am using solus budgie 4.1.
How can i switch to LTS version of Kernel
AMD® A4-3330mx apu with radeon(tm) hd graphics × 2 with 1.5 GB RAM.
Vibhi this thread isn't intended for such support questions, you should have searched for existing problems like yours or opened a new thread if your question isn't answered anywhere already.
But since we're already here... Check out the articles on this page: https://getsol.us/articles/troubleshooting/
Probably most fitting to your question: https://getsol.us/articles/troubleshooting/boot-management/en/#bring-up-the-boot-menu-with-no-timeout-set
- Edited
There are 8 (eight) Solus installations here. They are independent one from another. Each DE is installed in its own, separate, independent partition.
4 DEs run on 5.6.19-158.current kernel. They are installed in sda6, 7, 8, 9 partitions. From time to time each DE crashes on boot up. It's a pain.
4 other DEs run on 4.14.189-161.lts kernel. They are installed in sda10, 11, 12, 13 partitions. None crashes on boot up. No problems. Never.
The laptop has 2 (two) MBR (msdos)-partitioned internal hard disks. Each disk has 16 usable partitions. Paritions are labeled as:
- sda1, sda2,.. sda16 on the 1st disk
- sdb1, sdb2,.. sdb16 on the 2nd sisk
Seems like 5.6.19-158.current
kernel can't distinguish well between two internal disks. From time to time it mixes sda... with sdb... partitions on boot up and in file managers. It's an early impression. Didn't investigate deeper yet.
Nothing similar happens in 4 other DEs, running on 4.14.189-161.lts
kernel. They never crash on boot up. Never mix sda... with sdb... paritions in file managers. Solus DEs with LTS kernel seem to be rock-solid.
Conclusion.
Solus Plasma, Gnome, Mate, (...) with
5.6.19-158.current
kernel are not reliableSolus Plasma, Gnome, Mate, (...) with
4.14.189-161.lts
kernel are more reliable
Thanks for reading
Edit: Typo.
just 2c from the peanut gallery: my girlfriend's 2019 Dell XPS 13 runs like butter on current but gets the black screen and cursor (no boot) with LTS. My personal (unsolicited) opinion is that 5.4 would likely be a good option at this point, but that said, i don't think 4.19 would be a bad option.
been using solus since it was evolve, and it has eclipsed all the other distros to become my daily driver and the distro i put on all my friends machines when they want to try linux. THANK YOU for your work.
HP EliteBook 2740p
Solus 4.1 - Budgie
linux-current: Failure upon suspend/resume
linux-lts: Suspend/resume work properly
I am thankful you maintain both current and LTS, as my wont is to go current/bleeding-edge unless something breaks (hello, suspend/resume),, in which case, lts/stable is a wonderful thing to have.
Like you stated. 4.19 seems like a half-measure with likely nearly as much work as going to a 5.x LTS... I'd say maybe going all the way to 5.x LTS will buy you more time to patch/push fixes upstream against a kernel that should in theory, support more hardware than the 4.19 branch... We hope.
I know this platform is ancient, but it is performant enough, and I can't get over the form-factor and repariability.
(Just discovered Solus after distro-hopping for over a week, seeking a distro where I have easy access to the geospatial tools I need, and they're actually UP TO DATE!!!
Solus is wonderful, and has taken the place of Lubuntu for me, which is something since I've been using that since 10.04)
- Edited
Just my 2 cents or Euro equivalent...Debian Stable offers newer kernels via the Backports repo for those instances where the stable kernel (Solus LTS equivalent) doesn't work well. I'm wondering why users with newer hardware would want to use an LTS kernel.
Edit -- Just checked the Debian Testing repos and as of now, the kernel version that would be used in the next stable release would be 5.8.10.x, so maybe it might be a good idea to update the LTS kernel.
I have installed the LTS Kernel and the Current Kernel with zero problems. Including every component package available via Eopkg. All of you have in my opinion made one of the best Linux Distributions available to date. Second to none. Equally as flawless (infer superior to Clear Linux) as the Clear Linux Project from which I very recently migrated even whilst being far more functional versus the more spartan nature of the aforementioned operating system. Congratulations and my thanks to the Core Team accordingly.
DataDrake Seems like 5.10 will be the next LTS.
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sothis6881 first we need to get 5.7/5.8 to current rolling so we can even think about 5.10 LTS
Hope that bugs with 5.7/5.8 will be fixed soon, so many new hardware is released and I'm preordering Ryzen 5900X and RX6900XT, hope Solus team will manage to solve those issues to the end of year. Don't wanna use Manjaro or Fedora as Solus is just a sweet spot for my like.