Harvey Yeah then either you're not up to date or its failing to install the new kernel image correctly. This usually happens when the UEFI partition is too small. But your not dual booting so that becomes less likely unless you did custom partitioning when you installed Solus. sudo eopkg it --reinstall linux-current See what errors if any it gives. If none try rebooting again.
alex5nader No errors when running that, rebooted again to the same old kernel. uname -r gives the same output. EFI partition has 421M/500M free.
Harvey alex5nader huh... sudo clr-boot-manager set-timeout 5 sudo clr-boot-manager update Reboot this time you'll have a menu. See if it gives you multiple options, if it does manually choose the newer kernel.
alex5nader Harvey THAT WAS IT! Chose 159 from the two, and booted perfectly fine. Very glad to have this working again. Thanks so much! Is there anything I need to do to make it permanent, or will it automatically use the last one chosen?
Harvey alex5nader Now you've booted into the newer kernel. sudo clr-boot-manager set-timeout 0 sudo clr-boot-manager update It should continue booting into this kernel now, after that. Super glad its fixed 😃 After that reboot again to make sure.
RobertK alex5nader If Timeshift was in the package manager then it may have fixed this issue. Actually Timeshift should be one of the installed apps when you install Solus.
brent RobertK a year old, but food for thought https://discuss.getsol.us/d/378-installing-timeshift-is-solus/29