Downgrading just the kernel, without also paying attention to the matching nvidia modules, will cause problems.
I think itâs better for me to stay out of here, @mithrial knows much better than me (Iâm not even running Manjaro because this is one of the things that ⌠annoyed me).
yes I do and I am additionally using optimus manager where I am just using integrated gpu for long battery. I tried switching to hybrid mode and even fully nvidia but the brightness issue still persists.
I think I should open up a new thread for this but back to original question why am I not able to downgrade. Can you help me with it ?
I am pretty sure I am up-to-date. Given nvidia were too upgraded today in front of my eyes.
sudo pacman -S linux61-nvidia î˛ 1 â î˛ 13s ď
warning: linux61-nvidia-525.85.05-1 is up to date -- reinstalling
resolving dependencies...
looking for conflicting packages...
Package (1) Old Version New Version Net Change
extra/linux61-nvidia 525.85.05-1 525.85.05-1 0.00 MiB
Total Installed Size: 51.66 MiB
Net Upgrade Size: 0.00 MiB
:: Proceed with installation? [Y/n]
I used it⌠the package is already installed. and I use pacman instead of pamac.
I just donât get how even after using -U the kernel wasnât downgraded.
see above - you need to select the other kernel at boot time
you get to see it when you hit ESC shortly after the POST (manufacturer logo or ⌠something)
list what is in the pacman cache: ls -hl /var/cache/pacman/pkg
filter for files starting with âlinuxâ ls -hl /var/cache/pacman/pkg/linux*
was not a downgrade - you simply told pacman to install this specific file from the pacman cache
If you have previous versions of it in the cache
(see the way to list them above)
then you can point pacman to them and install those in the same way.
Be careful especially with nvidia stuff, or youâll end up not being able to boot.
⌠never just the kernel, always the matching nvidia modules too âŚ
To summarize the thread, since beginning user says he wants to downgrade the kernel. In reality user wants to switch from kernel 6.x to kernel 5.15.
User has the 5.15 kernel installed and keeps saying he wants to downgrade the kernel. In reality, as user already has kernel 5.15 installed, he just needs to select it in GRUB as said already.
If user would actually downgrade (like in the real definition of the term) his kernel, he would have lot of âout of his skillâ issues to manage all the modules (Nvidia, virtualbox, ethernet, and all) dependencies and his system would be broken. User doesnât want to downgrade his kernel anyway in reality, as already mentioned.
User needs to access his GRUB menu when booting, and select his already installed kernel, then when booted on the wanted kernel, user can remove, using the appropriate tool (mhwd-kernel or Manjaro Settings GUI), his non wanted kernel.
Like @omano said - and others before:
what you actually want is to select the 515 kernel at the grub prompt and boot using that.
It is already installed - you just need to use it.
This is what you actually want - instead of âdowngradingâ!
âŚ
If you insist on downgrading - and you manage to do it - you still have to the choose that kernel at boot time. You will be in the exact same situation you are in now.
Just with the added âbenefitâ of having done a lot more work and the much increased potential for this to go wrong.
⌠the list you posted shows what is in your pacman cache, what you could use.
You know the currently installed version - if you insist on installing an older one ⌠look at the version numbers.
I demonstrated how you can look for possible candidates in your cache.
Iâll not make the decision for you.
You actually can , I made a post about it and to my knowledge it hasnât been fixed in the tool, I didnât even receive an answer about the issue officially being an issue or intended (which I highly doubt as you can have one running kernel, and be able to remove it following my instruction ).
//EDIT: apparently Unbeknownst selected the Solution so I guess he eventually went to the GRUB menu.