v3g4n wrote:Is there something that is requiring you to need that kernel or just shiny new syndrome? Looks like they are keeping up with the kernel releases quite well. It takes hours to compile each new kernel release so it doesn't pay to package every single one.
it's an update tat fix a few bugs, why not.
kernel update r more critical than apps.
i'm using the latest update liquorix-amd64_4.14-8.
not able to install header due to gcc-7 dependencies.
it run a lot better/smoother/faster than 4.13.13(eol) like new engine powerup my old pc.
MX-17.1_x64 Horizon, G41M-P33 Combo (MS-7592), Pentium E5400 (2706 MHz), 8Gb RAM (984 MT/s),
Intel 4 Series Integrated Graphics, Realtek PCIe Fast RTL8101/2/6E, PCI Gigabit RTL8169 Ethernets.
Accepted Linux when i found MX-Linux in 2016.
There are supposedly lots of Ryzen AMD code added, including CPU temperature monitoring.
The 4.13 is unstable (maybe) on this hardware, and 4.14 might be better.
But I am testing the antix 4.10 kernel on MX-17 RC1 for stability currently. If that is stable, I can stay on that for quite a while.
antiX 4.14.5 kernel should hit the repos very soon.
Edit - Whoops, I misread - ignore.
anticapitalista
Reg. linux user #395339.
Philosophers have interpreted the world in many ways; the point is to change it.
stsoh wrote:
it's an update tat fix a few bugs, why not.
kernel update r more critical than apps.
i'm using the latest update liquorix-amd64_4.14-8.
not able to install header due to gcc-7 dependencies.
it run a lot better/smoother/faster than 4.13.13(eol) like new engine powerup my old pc.
So install 14.4-7 (14.4-4.3) from the test repo then, don't need to be using 4.13. You will also be able to install the headers then since Stevo recompiles them using Stretches gcc-6 so there will not be the dependency on gcc-7.
Kinda busy helping get MX 17 out now, but there's always my Liquorix openSUSE build service repo that builds the kernels much, much faster on their farm than I can on my laptop. I'll get 5.1 loaded it into it right now.
Though I now only do Debian 8, 9, and Ubuntu 14.04 versions now that Liquorix does the other Ubuntus in a PPA. Also I make much fewer changes to the files when backporting them than we used to...makes it much easier on my part.
v3g4n wrote:
So install 14.4-7 (14.4-4.3) from the test repo then, don't need to be using 4.13. You will also be able to install the headers then since Stevo recompiles them using Stretches gcc-6 so there will not be the dependency on gcc-7.
u r not helping at all, i did all b4 u even tot about it.
i managed to upgrade gcc-7 and cpp-7 from buster repo.
installed both linux-headers/image-4.14.0-5.1-liquorix-amd64_4.14-8_amd64.
uninstalled kernel 4.13.13 and all related after upgrade to latest liquorix.
the best.
Last edited by stsoh on Wed Dec 13, 2017 12:17 pm, edited 3 times in total.
MX-17.1_x64 Horizon, G41M-P33 Combo (MS-7592), Pentium E5400 (2706 MHz), 8Gb RAM (984 MT/s),
Intel 4 Series Integrated Graphics, Realtek PCIe Fast RTL8101/2/6E, PCI Gigabit RTL8169 Ethernets.
Accepted Linux when i found MX-Linux in 2016.
Stevo wrote:Kinda busy helping get MX 17 out now, but there's always my Liquorix openSUSE build service repo that builds the kernels much, much faster on their farm than I can on my laptop. I'll get 5.1 loaded it into it right now.
.......
MX-17.1_x64 Horizon, G41M-P33 Combo (MS-7592), Pentium E5400 (2706 MHz), 8Gb RAM (984 MT/s),
Intel 4 Series Integrated Graphics, Realtek PCIe Fast RTL8101/2/6E, PCI Gigabit RTL8169 Ethernets.
Accepted Linux when i found MX-Linux in 2016.
"Upgrading" those two critical system libraries very probably means your system is now broken and insane, and you will have trouble installing applications in the future. That's why we go to all the trouble of backporting and making sure our builds won't do that. Why didn't you follow that simple recipe in the thread I linked to add my OBS repo?
....System restore from backup and reinstalling speed....
Yup, MX 17 is great. I just did a snapshot this afternoon, second time I used this feature, I love seeing top showing 1180% CPU !
And the apttik utility makes it easy to keep your installed applications.
Yes, installing from usb is very fast, for me three or four minutes. I used to burn DVDs, no more.
I never saw a big problem with a reinstall if you structure your data right. I have one disk with partitions for two OS versions, and I have a separate larger disk for data, the videos, music, pictures, documents, etc. With the data separate, changing the OS or programs is an easy task. I like a MX and an antix installation, with the antix one available to test new versions, like the next antix, maybe a different kernel when 4.15 comes out. And the new snapshot iso which goes on the data drive makes it easy.