,
Guillaume
> -Original Message-
> From: Per Jessen
> Sent: 28 April 2020 12:25
> To: opensuse-arm@opensuse.org
> Subject: Re: [opensuse-arm] keeping multiple kernels on ARM systems ?
>
> Per Jessen wrote:
>
> > Matthias Brugger wrote:
> >
> >> Can
Per Jessen wrote:
> Matthias Brugger wrote:
>
>> Can you try if you put your custom dtb into
>> /boot/dtb/current/
>> I suppose this directory does not get overwritten when updating the
>> kernel.
>>
>> Would be nice to get feedback on this :)
>
> I'll see what I can do - I have a third nanopi
Matthias Brugger wrote:
> Can you try if you put your custom dtb into
> /boot/dtb/current/
> I suppose this directory does not get overwritten when updating the
> kernel.
>
> Would be nice to get feedback on this :)
I'll see what I can do - I have a third nanopi that needs updating, I
think.
On 22/04/2020 14:38, Per Jessen wrote:
> Guillaume Gardet wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> From: Per Jessen
>>> Sent: 19 April 2020 10:39
>>>
>>> Question - the multiple kernels feature ought to have retained my dtb
>>> directory contents in /boot/dtb-4.12.14-lp150.12.48/
Guillaume Gardet wrote:
> Hi,
>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: Per Jessen
>> Sent: 19 April 2020 10:39
>>
>> Question - the multiple kernels feature ought to have retained my dtb
>> directory contents in /boot/dtb-4.12.14-lp150.12.48/ ? Or not ?
>
> AFAIK, there is no multiversion
Hi,
> -Original Message-
> From: Per Jessen
> Sent: 19 April 2020 10:39
> To: opensuse-arm@opensuse.org
> Subject: [opensuse-arm] keeping multiple kernels on ARM systems ?
>
> (repost from opensuse@o.o)
> I'm sure many have this feature enabled, just in case. Keeping multiple
> kernels