On 21.03.2017 02:25, david...@freevolt.org wrote:
It is not clear to me whether your question
I regularly do apt-get upgrade, but not to next Debian version. So, how this
kernel be old for Debian 7?
is a request for information, or merely rhetorical (ie, an assertion
that your kernel is in fact current relative to debian 7).
In case you were asking, I'm still using debian 7 too,
$ cat /etc/debian_version
7.11
and, for what it's worth, in case it interests you
$ uname -a
Linux leviathan 3.2.0-4-686-pae #1 SMP Debian 3.2.86-1 i686 GNU/Linux
I notice the version you posted here (3.2.84-1) is slightly older than
mine. If like myself you plan on running the 3.2.0-4-* release for a
while, It might[1] be worth upgrading at least to version 3.2.86-1:
Well, doing regulat apt-get update && apt-get upgrade, I fought that kernel is also upgraded. I've seen this several times. How comes it wasn't
updated to 3.2.86-1.
As for apt-cache search '^linux-image-*' :
linux-image-3.2.0-4-amd64 - Linux 3.2 for 64-bit PCs
linux-image-3.2.0-4-amd64-dbg - Debugging symbols for Linux 3.2.0-4-amd64
linux-image-3.2.0-4-rt-amd64 - Linux 3.2 for 64-bit PCs, PREEMPT_RT
linux-image-3.2.0-4-rt-amd64-dbg - Debugging symbols for Linux 3.2.0-4-rt-amd64
linux-image-2.6-amd64 - Linux for 64-bit PCs (dummy package)
linux-image-amd64 - Linux for 64-bit PCs (meta-package)
linux-image-rt-amd64 - Linux for 64-bit PCs (meta-package), PREEMPT_RT
Then doing apt-get install linux-image-amd64 says it already latest version.
Anyway, this slightly different (minor) version difference could be the problem?
--
Mimiko desu.