Score:0

Remove the most current kernel

cn flag

I noticed that the "similar questions" responses are several (if not a decade) old so wanted to just check is there is a more recent way of removing the most current kernel.

During the updates the other day, the kernel was updated to 5.19.0-42 but now the machine will not boot. I did display the boot messages and it hangs at "systemd-user-sessions.service". I am running version 22.04 as a VM under Virtualbox.

I have for now been pressing ESC and choosing the previous kernel (5.19.0-41) to boot the machine.

P.S. I actually have three similar VMs (v22.04 VMs) and all are displaying the same problem.

waltinator avatar
it flag
Running away from the "current" kernel (and all subsequent kernel versions) is unwise, and should only be considered after an investigation into why the current kernel doesn't boot.
philld avatar
cn flag
How does removing the current kernel (5.19.0-42) prevent subsequent updates? If there is a way to make the previous kernel (5.19-0.41) the default for booting until the next kernel is released would be a solution. Per above, the existing problem is with kernel 5.19.0-42 and the systemd-user-sessions.service module.
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