[00:46] <brian__> wsg shotty
[00:46] <brian__> shawty
[05:21] <dabbler> How do I get Dr. Konqi to use debuginfod to automatically get symbols for bug report stack traces?
[07:26] <adarshks> !!SERIOUS BUG!! Closing laptop lid open again shows flickering screen
[07:27] <adarshks> Hello everyone I'm an HP 245 G5 Laptop with following OS and HW config
[07:27] <adarshks> Operating System: Kubuntu 22.04
[07:27] <adarshks> KDE Plasma Version: 5.24.7
[07:27] <adarshks> KDE Frameworks Version: 5.92.0
[07:27] <adarshks> Qt Version: 5.15.3
[07:27] <adarshks> Kernel Version: 5.15.0-73-generic (64-bit)
[09:02] <chasm52> Any ideas for troubleshooting boot from grub with black screen? Advanced boot options works with Linux kernel 6.0.21  : I've tried 1. Update grub 2. Update Nvidia drivers 3.  Cleaned / purged packages
[09:04] <chasm52> It just happened today, I don't think there was any major updates  - Ubuntu version 23.04 (KDE 5.27.4)
[11:15] <yossarianuk> hi - i managed to break the nvidia driver somehow earlier - for some reason discover installed kernel images - lowlatency and -oracle and their nvidia modules - this messed up everything..
[11:16] <yossarianuk> (on 23.04 btw) my solution was to remove all non standard kernel images - not sure why it downloaded them..
[12:06] <rms> I have installed amdgpu drivers but when I check Additional Drivers it doesn't list it and it says No proprietary drivers are in use. How come?
[12:23] <tomreyn> rms: they aren't proprietary
[12:24] <tomreyn> i mean "amdgpu" isn't
[12:32] <rms> https://askubuntu.com/questions/1472827/black-screen-after-waking-kubuntu-22-04-lts-from-sleep-amd-radeon-rx6700xt-am
[12:32] <rms> please help :(
[12:32] <rms> My Kubuntu 22.04 won't wake up properly from sleep, the screen stays black even though the mouse is visible and I can move it. How could I fix it? I have AMD Radeon RX6700XT + AMD Ryzen 7700X CPU. I have the AMD drivers from their website installed.
[12:40] <tomreyn> rms: uninstall those and use those provided by kubuntu as part of the kernel.
[12:40] <tomreyn> do a bios upgrade
[12:40] <tomreyn> try ...
[12:40] <tomreyn> !acpi_osi
[12:41] <rms> how do I totally uninstall amd gpu drivers installed from the .deb package from AMD drivers website?
[12:42] <tomreyn> or accept that it's a common issue with many laptops that suspending / returning from suspend does not work reliably.
[12:42] <tomreyn> if it's just a .deb then you    sudo apt purge <package>
[12:42] <rms> It's not a laptop, it's an expensive rig running AMD Radeon RX6700XT + AMD Ryzen 7700X CPU
[12:43] <rms> 2 monitors via DP
[12:43] <tomreyn> okay lets say suspend in general
[12:43] <rms> yes but I can't use my rig without having to reboot each morning when I go to work
[12:44] <rms> that's totally unacceptable. I made this rig specifically on AMD so I wouldnt have the problems I was having with Intel + NVidia
[12:45] <tomreyn> talk to your mainboard vendor, tell them their linux support is broken.
[12:45] <rms> How can I check what is causing the error?
[12:45] <tomreyn> journalctl -b
[12:46] <rms> do I type that after logging into other terminal ctrl + alt + f2?
[12:46] <rms> as I am unable to use my main session after sleep
[12:46] <tomreyn> that or just from a terminal emulator such as konsole
[12:47] <tomreyn> you can reboot and read the previous log with    journalctl -b -1
[12:47] <rms> There are thousand of lines
[12:48] <tomreyn> right, that's normal, its the system log.
[12:48] <rms> how do I check the relevant ones?
[12:49] <tomreyn> you could just have it output anything above warning level by adding -p 4
[12:50] <tomreyn> anything relating to acpi, pm (power management), suspend, amdgpu may be relevant
[12:50] <tomreyn> and more
[12:50] <tomreyn> i won't spend time on trying to help reviewing your logs until you've done all the other things
[12:50] <rms> Okay I uninstalled AMD drivers, will see if this works. How do I update my BIOS please?
[12:50] <rms> it's a MBO Gigabyte B650M motherboard
[12:51] <tomreyn> find the right mainboard on gigabytes' website, and follow their instructions to update the firmware
[12:53] <tomreyn> nowadays, you can usually choose between upgrading using a windows application or preparing a usb stick which the old bios can then access and upgrade itself from
[12:54] <tomreyn> journalctl -b | grep DMI:     will tell you more about your current bios
[13:08] <rms> I tried to update my BIOS using an NTFS formated USB but it didn't show up in the list of removable drives in BIOS update feature
[13:08] <rms> could it have been because of it being NTFS?
[13:15] <rms> why can't I even paste files in my USB using Dolphinafter I formatted it to ext3?
[13:15] <rms> why can't I even paste files in my USB using Dolphin after I formatted it to ext3? it is mounted, what the heck?
[13:21] <Guest50> should USB be in format ext3 or fat32/ntfs in order to flash BIOS when running GNU/Linux as main OS?
[13:22] <Guest50> it doesn't detect as fat32/ntfs :(
[13:27] <tomreyn> usually fat32, but you really need to read the manufacturersÄ instructions since it can vary
[13:28] <tomreyn> (and obviously this is not a matter of kubuntu, your operating system)
[13:28] <Guest50> it won't detect it at all
[13:28] <Guest50> not even ext3
[13:28] <Guest50> jfc
[13:30] <Guest50> fuck Linux, it's 2023 and it still has a thousand problems to get a proper system working without various errors
[13:30] <Guest50> nothing ever works out of the box
[13:30] <tomreyn> please mind the language
[13:32] <tomreyn> *some* manufacturers support firmware upgrades through fwupd. but it always matters on what hardware the user chooses to buy, and whether linux is a supported platform for it.
[13:33] <Guest50> I am currently updated BIOS, hope it will somehow fix the suspend/sleep black screen problem for my AMD Radeon graphics card ( I suspect it's graphic cards or Plasma related)
[13:34] <Guest50> how does one restart plasma from another terminal if current session can not be accessed due to black monitor?
[13:34] <Guest50> Without having to reboot the system obviously
[13:34] <Guest50> It's Kubuntu 22.04 LTS
[16:58] <joseeduardo> Guest50, it's just a try, if still not, plug another monitor to the system mirror it.
[17:04] <joseeduardo> SSH login, from there youu
[17:05] <joseeduardo> will on. Hope help you.
[18:52] <mmikowski> Guest50: IMO, if you insist on continuing to buy commodity hardware not tested and optimized for a distro, you will continue to get the same issues. One huge benefit of the PC ecosytem is that there is always new hardware coming out; the downside is that introduces unsupported and buggy hardware. You can do research yourself and ongoing support for
[18:52] <mmikowski> yourself, or you can buy from a company that provides it for you. Consider, for example, that the experience of running a Hackintosh is about the same as running Linux on any old hardware.
[19:01] <tomreyn> said guest left 3.5h ago
[19:24] <mmikowski> thanks tomreyn. So it's there if he comes back.
 Is there a graphical tool such as GTK gdebi / Qt qapt  to go the other way around?
 Like taking a Git clone repo url & build a Debian package from it?