I hope you understand what I mean.
On my grub screen there are 4 options, 2 regular booting and 2 recovery mode afair.
I cannot access the first regular one, only the second one. Cannot give you a screenshot or a picture because I’m scared of rebooting the computer again.
If I execute cat /etc/debian_version it returns 13.0, so it’s already upgraded.
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y doesn’t return any errors.
what is going on?
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- What was the thing you did before this started happening? - upgraded from 12.11 to 13.0. I just deleted some old kernels and freed some space in the boot partition. Could this be the reason? not enough free boot space? - That doesn’t sound like a fresh install as is the question above. Sounds like an upgrade install. 🤔 - Edit: Are you running Trixie now? - Edit 2: Did you update your sources list? - if by fresh install you mean nuking the old partitions and installing brand new 13.0 from an usb stick no, this is not a fresh install, fresh as in just now installed - I am running trixie - in /etc/apt/sources.list.d there is only one txt file named debian.sources, as explained in debian’s instructions page. Is that wyat you mean? - I also updated grub after freeing some boot space: sudo update-grub2 
 
- deleted by creator - sorry, typed that wrong, debian 12.11 
 
- Did you free up space by manually deleting files from the boot partition? Then chances are you deleted some vital files and you should reinstall the kernels and grub. - I listed all installed kernels: - dpkg -l | grep linux-image | awk ‘{print$2}’ - then removed several old kernels: - sudo apt remove --purge linux-image-XXX - then updated grub: - sudo update-grub2 - I’ve never had to manually delete kernels. - Apt autoremove automatically takes care of older kernels - Maybe try reinstalling your default stable kernel linux-image-amd64 (or whatever architecture) - Typically, no need to specify specific kernel versions like 6.12 
- Sound like they may not have been old 😅 - Edit: Can you list the kernels now? 
- You can look at the /boot/grub/grub.cfg file for details as to what each option is on the grub menu. It’s not the prettiest file though. Search for - menuentry, that should be followed by the name of the entry and below details for what kernel and options it uses.
- You should really just back up your files, do a fresh install, and don’t fuck with the system like that. 
 
 
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