I think if you install 20.04 or 20.04.1 without internet, so it doesn't update, you should be able to boot into the install and remove the linux-generic-hwe-20.04 and install linux-generic before...
Type: Posts; User: jeremy31; Keyword(s):
I think if you install 20.04 or 20.04.1 without internet, so it doesn't update, you should be able to boot into the install and remove the linux-generic-hwe-20.04 and install linux-generic before...
Post results from terminal for
dpkg -l | grep linux-modules-extra-$(uname -r)
You can use the grub menu/advanced options to boot into a 5.4 kernel where everything should work from there you should be able to
sudo apt remove linux-image-5.8.0-36-generic...
Moved to Ubuntu/Debian based
Yes indeed as in the past only the second point release caused this madness
I did notice that the 20.04 Beta ISO did not have the hwe installed according to the manifest file but instead used linux-generic which would keep you on 5.4
The spec sheet I looked at showed that the 7080 used a combo wifi/bluetooth card that was either Intel or Atheros, no mention of a module like they used on older laptops
Is there some option in BIOS to enable wifi and/or bluetooth?
Post results for
usb-devices | awk '/8505/' RS=
Please post result from terminal for
uname -a
TJ on IRC said that the 20.04 desktop ISO had the hwe listed in the manifest. It is possible that an update in the past removed the hwe and installed linux-generic. My ISO was dated 24 April 2020...
Actually it happened on a fresh install with updates enabled. I then reinstalled without internet, did a sudo apt update and then looked at results from the apt policy command, it showed a 5.4...
It is coming from normal upgrades, you can check to see the results from
apt policy linux-generic-hwe-20.04
If you want to avoid the 5.8 kernels, you might have to
sudo apt remove...
I have no idea why people with 20.04 and the 5.4 kernels were updated to the 5.8. I did a fresh 20.04 install yesterday using an old ISO and I had the 5.8 kernel and haven't been able to find out why
What results from terminal for
apt rdepends linux-image-5.8.0-34-generic
Your kernel and arch both show x86_64 but the line from the build log shows make ARCH=arm64
Post results for
uname -a; arch
Try
sudo dkms install rtl8814au/4.3.21 -k 5.4.0-59-generic
Then reboot into the 5.4.0-59 kernel
Not sure how it could have worked when I see
CONFIG_RTL8814A = n
I would imagine new results from
dkms status; lsmod | grep cfg
Might explain what happened
I see this in the source code {code] {USB_DEVICE(0x2357, 0x0106), .driver_info = RTL8814A}, /* TP-LINK Archer T9UH */[/code]
The aircrack-ng/rtl8812au repo doesn't support the rtl8814au any more,...
You actually need the rtl8814au version from the aircrack-ng repo on github. They took that one out of rtl8812au recently
https://github.com/aircrack-ng/rtl8814au
You will likely need non-free repos and the Intel firmware package to have wifi on Debian
Sounds like wifi power management, in terminal
sudo sed -i 's/wifi.powersave = 3/wifi.powersave = 2/' /etc/NetworkManager/conf.d/default-wifi-powersave-on.conf
systemctl restart...
Paddy, on the bottom left of any page there is a dropdown box with --Ubuntu vB4.x you just select Mobile View from there
If you have chrome set to clear cookies on exit, that would cause it. If your IP changes a lot is another reason
I get logged out frequently on my smart phone