If it where arch, but its manjaro.
Somehow during the last kernel update the grub info was not changed to point to the current kernel names…still pointed at the old kernel…and that had been replaced.
After figuring all that out in chroot, fix was as simple as changing a single line in that grub file
Can’t relate, arch testing never broke in years. Without manual maintenance.
If it where arch, but its manjaro. Somehow during the last kernel update the grub info was not changed to point to the current kernel names…still pointed at the old kernel…and that had been replaced. After figuring all that out in chroot, fix was as simple as changing a single line in that grub file
Manjarno never surprises -_-
Yet another Majaro L? Not one to dunk on random distros, but I’ll always make an exception for Manjaro
Only the morons that turn on AUR despite being warned against it ever have problems on Manjaro.
Maybe im misunderstanding something but how is turning on the AUR supposed to prevent the grub file from being updated?
The dangers of relying on a prebuilt system which is maintained … lets just say not state of the art.
Also, would grub-hook be an option?
Grub-hook is what I use to prevent this exact situation.
GRUB-HOOK PACKAGE GIVES YOU STABILITY ON THE SYSTEM YOU LOVE
THE KINDA STABILITY THAT MAKES YOU BOOGY
*insert cringe dance*