=== tomreyn_ is now known as tomreyn [00:46] wsg shotty [00:46] shawty === guiverc2 is now known as guiverc === japi is now known as cuntti [05:21] How do I get Dr. Konqi to use debuginfod to automatically get symbols for bug report stack traces? === paolo is now known as paop [07:26] !!SERIOUS BUG!! Closing laptop lid open again shows flickering screen [07:26] adarshks: I am only a bot, please don't think I'm intelligent :) [07:27] Hello everyone I'm an HP 245 G5 Laptop with following OS and HW config [07:27] Operating System: Kubuntu 22.04 [07:27] KDE Plasma Version: 5.24.7 [07:27] KDE Frameworks Version: 5.92.0 [07:27] Qt Version: 5.15.3 [07:27] Kernel Version: 5.15.0-73-generic (64-bit) === paolo is now known as paop [09:02] 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] It just happened today, I don't think there was any major updates - Ubuntu version 23.04 (KDE 5.27.4) === Lord_of_Life_ is now known as Lord_of_Life [11:15] 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] (on 23.04 btw) my solution was to remove all non standard kernel images - not sure why it downloaded them.. [12:06] 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] rms: they aren't proprietary [12:24] i mean "amdgpu" isn't [12:32] https://askubuntu.com/questions/1472827/black-screen-after-waking-kubuntu-22-04-lts-from-sleep-amd-radeon-rx6700xt-am [12:32] please help :( [12:32] 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] rms: uninstall those and use those provided by kubuntu as part of the kernel. [12:40] do a bios upgrade [12:40] try ... [12:40] !acpi_osi [12:40] If your system is unstable or power management does not work well and logs show ACPI issues, you can try to make the Linux kernel pretend it was Windows during boot (which can help on hardware which was only tested with Windows): http://iam.tj/prototype/enhancements/Windows-acpi_osi.html [12:41] how do I totally uninstall amd gpu drivers installed from the .deb package from AMD drivers website? [12:42] or accept that it's a common issue with many laptops that suspending / returning from suspend does not work reliably. [12:42] if it's just a .deb then you sudo apt purge [12:42] It's not a laptop, it's an expensive rig running AMD Radeon RX6700XT + AMD Ryzen 7700X CPU [12:43] 2 monitors via DP [12:43] okay lets say suspend in general [12:43] yes but I can't use my rig without having to reboot each morning when I go to work [12:44] 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] talk to your mainboard vendor, tell them their linux support is broken. [12:45] How can I check what is causing the error? [12:45] journalctl -b [12:46] do I type that after logging into other terminal ctrl + alt + f2? [12:46] as I am unable to use my main session after sleep [12:46] that or just from a terminal emulator such as konsole [12:47] you can reboot and read the previous log with journalctl -b -1 [12:47] There are thousand of lines [12:48] right, that's normal, its the system log. [12:48] how do I check the relevant ones? [12:49] you could just have it output anything above warning level by adding -p 4 [12:50] anything relating to acpi, pm (power management), suspend, amdgpu may be relevant [12:50] and more [12:50] i won't spend time on trying to help reviewing your logs until you've done all the other things [12:50] Okay I uninstalled AMD drivers, will see if this works. How do I update my BIOS please? [12:50] it's a MBO Gigabyte B650M motherboard [12:51] find the right mainboard on gigabytes' website, and follow their instructions to update the firmware [12:53] 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] journalctl -b | grep DMI: will tell you more about your current bios [13:08] 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] could it have been because of it being NTFS? [13:15] why can't I even paste files in my USB using Dolphinafter I formatted it to ext3? [13:15] 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] should USB be in format ext3 or fat32/ntfs in order to flash BIOS when running GNU/Linux as main OS? [13:22] it doesn't detect as fat32/ntfs :( [13:27] usually fat32, but you really need to read the manufacturersÄ instructions since it can vary [13:28] (and obviously this is not a matter of kubuntu, your operating system) [13:28] it won't detect it at all [13:28] not even ext3 [13:28] jfc [13:30] fuck Linux, it's 2023 and it still has a thousand problems to get a proper system working without various errors [13:30] nothing ever works out of the box [13:30] please mind the language [13:32] *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] 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] how does one restart plasma from another terminal if current session can not be accessed due to black monitor? [13:34] Without having to reboot the system obviously [13:34] It's Kubuntu 22.04 LTS [16:58] Guest50, it's just a try, if still not, plug another monitor to the system mirror it. [17:04] SSH login, from there youu [17:05] will on. Hope help you. [18:52] 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] 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] said guest left 3.5h ago [19:24] thanks tomreyn. So it's there if he comes back. [20:45] Is there a graphical tool such as GTK gdebi / Qt qapt  to go the other way around? [20:45] Like taking a Git clone repo url & build a Debian package from it?