It’s self explanatory, but the only port that connects a USB device is the mouse on a USB 3.0 motherboard after the weekly update. How do I revert it back (if possible) so everything works again? If that isn’t possible, how do I re-enable it so I don’t have to go through this again?
For reference, there should be four devices under lsusb, but there’s only three.
pebcak
April 14, 2023, 6:06pm
2
Did you reboot after updating if things like kernels got updated?
Yes, I did. I was wondering if the kernel update borked it.
pebcak
April 14, 2023, 6:15pm
4
Might be a possibility.
Do you have more than one kernel installed? If so, try booting with the other kernel(s) to see if things are alright.
If not, you could install another to test.
Also, you could use the command downgrade
to install a previous version of a package.
Example:
sudo downgarde linux
│ 346) linux 5.19.11.arch1 1 remote │
│ 347) linux 5.19.12.arch1 1 remote │
│ 348) linux 5.19.13.arch1 1 remote │
│ 349) linux 6.0.arch1 1 remote │
│ 350) linux 6.0.1.arch1 1 remote │
│ 351) linux 6.0.1.arch2 1 remote │
│ 352) linux 6.0.2.arch1 1 remote │
│ 353) linux 6.0.3.arch2 1 remote │
│ 354) linux 6.0.3.arch3 1 remote │
│ 355) linux 6.0.5.arch1 1 remote │
│ 356) linux 6.0.6.arch1 1 remote │
│ 357) linux 6.0.6.arch1 2 remote │
│ 358) linux 6.0.7.arch1 1 remote │
│ 359) linux 6.0.8.arch1 1 remote │
│ 360) linux 6.0.9.arch1 1 remote │
│ 361) linux 6.0.10.arch2 1 remote │
│ 362) linux 6.0.11.arch1 1 remote │
│ 363) linux 6.0.12.arch1 1 remote │
│ 364) linux 6.1.arch1 1 remote │
│ 365) linux 6.1.1.arch1 1 remote │
│ 366) linux 6.1.2.arch1 1 remote │
│ 367) linux 6.1.3.arch1 1 remote │
│ 368) linux 6.1.4.arch1 1 remote │
│ 369) linux 6.1.5.arch1 1 remote │
│ 370) linux 6.1.5.arch2 1 remote │
│ 371) linux 6.1.6.arch1 1 remote │
│ 372) linux 6.1.6.arch1 3 remote │
│ 373) linux 6.1.7.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 374) linux 6.1.8.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 375) linux 6.1.9.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 376) linux 6.1.9.arch1 2 remote │
│ - 377) linux 6.1.10.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 378) linux 6.1.11.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 379) linux 6.1.12.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 380) linux 6.2.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 381) linux 6.2.1.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 382) linux 6.2.2.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 383) linux 6.2.2.arch2 1 remote │
│ 384) linux 6.2.3.arch1 1 remote │
│ 385) linux 6.2.3.arch2 1 remote │
│ - 386) linux 6.2.5.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 387) linux 6.2.6.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 388) linux 6.2.7.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 389) linux 6.2.8.arch1 1 remote │
│ - 390) linux 6.2.9.arch1 1 remote ││
│ - 391) linux 6.2.9.arch1 1 /var/cache/pacman/pkg ││
│ - 392) linux 6.2.10.arch1 1 remote ││
│ > - 393) linux 6.2.10.arch1 1 /var/cache/pacman/pkg ││
│ + 394) linux 6.2.11.arch1 1 remote ││
│ + 395) linux 6.2.11.arch1 1 /var/cache/pacman/pkg ││
│ Available packages (core): │
│ 395/395
I only have a single kernel, which is the one listed in the pastebin. I’ll see if downgrading (or upgrading) to the previous kernel fixes things, and keep going until I hit the jackpot
You should update your Bios.
2 Likes
I downgraded the kernel and now it stalls right before the login screen. So now I need to find a way to revert the change (thankfully, I have my old Linux hard drive with Mint on it) and have it get to the login screen. Joy. I also need to find a tool to flash the BIOS.
pebcak
April 14, 2023, 8:55pm
8
If you have your EnOS live usb, you could try chrooting into your installed system and update it again.
You don’t need any tool to update the bios. You use m-flash which is built into the Bios settings.
How_to_flash_the_BIOS.pdf (523.2 KB)
I managed to chroot in, but trying to update the kernel gets me a /dev/fd/63 error.