Comment on "You should probably just throw it away"
spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 week agoJust to make things easier on others (or myself of the amd drivers have similar issues), how would one go about holding the driver at a specific version?
Comment on "You should probably just throw it away"
spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 week agoJust to make things easier on others (or myself of the amd drivers have similar issues), how would one go about holding the driver at a specific version?
zod000@lemmy.ml 1 week ago
I’m on a Debian based distro, but it is super simple. To hold a driver, or any package to a version just use “sudo aptitude hold <name or package here>” to undo this at any point just use “sudo aptitude unhold <name or package here>”. If you use the GUI package manager, there is a “Lock Version” option in a menu that does it.
If you’re on a Redhat based distro, Federa et al, I believe the keyword is “versionlock” for yum or dnf, but I would definitely recommend looking at a reference for the command before blinding following me on that one.