10/29/2023 0 Comments Ubuntu check resource usage![]() ![]() ✗ failed to verify the signature of the livepatch kernel module The kernel the machine is currently running will no longer receive new patches, it is recommended to upgrade to a new kernel and reboot. ✗ patches are no longer available for this version of the kernel, please upgrade ✗ the application caused a crash last time it was applied, check system logs with journalctl -f -t canonical-livepatchĪn attempt to apply the patch has failed and caused the client to crash. The kernel reported an error after applying the patch. ✗ module inserted but kernel bug detected The current kernel is up-to-date with the current patches released by Canonical. ✓ all applicable livepatch modules inserted No livepatch modules exist yet for this kernel. ✓ no livepatches needed for this kernel yet ⧗ livepatches are installed, but the module is not yet appliedĪ new patch has been downloaded and is going to be applied. The patch state line can also have one of several values: ✗ unable to determine kernel support status please contact Canonical support It is strongly recommended to upgrade and reboot, as the kernel will no longer receive any patches. ![]() This release of the kernel has reached the end of its support window. ✓ kernel is supported by Canonical until please upgrade and reboot The kernel state line can have one of several values: Tier: updates (Free usage This machine beta tests new patches.) Patch state: ✓ no livepatches needed for this kernel yet Kernel state: ✓ kernel is supported by Canonical until To show the current state of the client, run: Once canonical-livepatch, the livepatch client, is running on a machine, it will periodically (every hour by default) check for new patches. Why Livepatch is not working on my machine? What happens when a problem cannot be patched? What kind of updates are not provided by Livepatch? What kind of updates are provided by Livepatch? ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |