Not long ago (I'm not certain how long) I got a set of system updates that included a kernel upgrade to linux-image-3.13.0-93-generic -- which my research suggests was needed to patch a keyring vulnerability that could let a malicious user make the system crash. Unfortunately, I've never been able to complete a boot with that kernel; I've had to use my legacy GRUB to start "previous kernel" which is currently running linux-image-3.13.092-generic. Not much of a security upgrade if you can't actually run it, right?
I presume I'll want/need to uninstall that kernel version once I have an updated one that runs, so my "previous kernel" safeguard will continue to work -- but does anyone know what might cause this problem? I don't have a screen image; can't store one because the failure occurs before screen shots can be stored, but I can take a picture of the final text on the screen at that point, if it'll help -- even a video of the relevant boot sequence, if I have a way to upload that kind of file.
How can I either make this version run, or know what version to replace it with?
I presume I'll want/need to uninstall that kernel version once I have an updated one that runs, so my "previous kernel" safeguard will continue to work -- but does anyone know what might cause this problem? I don't have a screen image; can't store one because the failure occurs before screen shots can be stored, but I can take a picture of the final text on the screen at that point, if it'll help -- even a video of the relevant boot sequence, if I have a way to upload that kind of file.
How can I either make this version run, or know what version to replace it with?
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