Just replying here in case it helps others in the future. I've managed to resolve my problem by disabling Bluetooth in the BIOS/UEFI config.
On Tue, Dec 06, 2022 at 08:50:24AM -0600, David Wright wrote: > On Tue 06 Dec 2022 at 14:25:02 (-0000), Curt wrote: > > I have twenty bluetooth modules in > /lib/modules/5.10.0-19-amd64/kernel/drivers/bluetooth/ > > $ grep 'Reading Intel version' > /lib/modules/5.10.0-19-amd64/kernel/drivers/bluetooth/* > grep: /lib/modules/5.10.0-19-amd64/kernel/drivers/bluetooth/btintel.ko: > binary file matches > grep: /lib/modules/5.10.0-19-amd64/kernel/drivers/bluetooth/hci_uart.ko: > binary file matches > $ I have identical results here. Thanks for the tip on finding where those kinds of messages come from - I'm sure it will be useful for troubleshooting future problems. > > I have /etc/bluetooth/main.conf and /etc/default/bluetooth (but maybe > > you don't). > > > > If you do, though, have one or both of those files, for the former: > > > > AutoEnable=false > > > > and the latter > > > > BLUETOOTH_ENABLED=0 I don't have either of those on the system in question: $ ls /etc/bluetooth ls: cannot access '/etc/bluetooth': No such file or directory $ ls /etc/default/bluetooth ls: cannot access '/etc/default/bluetooth': No such file or directory Strange that it was trying to load bluetooth modules when so much of the bluetooth ecosystem doesn't seem to be installed, but, *shrug*. -- Dave Sherohman