Fix a couple of hyperlinks in troubleshooting docs
Signed-off-by: Peter O'Connor <peter@solus-project.com>
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@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ eopkg info linux-current | head -n2; uname -a
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If the kernel version and release don't match from lines 2 and 3 of the output, then you aren't booting into the latest kernel and this is the likely cause of X not loading (particularly if you just installed the drivers). A couple of common reasons are:
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If the kernel version and release don't match from lines 2 and 3 of the output, then you aren't booting into the latest kernel and this is the likely cause of X not loading (particularly if you just installed the drivers). A couple of common reasons are:
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- On a grub machine, a common cause for not booting the latest kernel is due to Solus not being the boot loader on the MBR. Make sure you are booting via the Solus boot loader (if possible), or update grub on the distro that own the boot loader, see [Legacy/BIOS installation](Link Above).
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- On a grub machine, a common cause for not booting the latest kernel is due to Solus not being the boot loader on the MBR. Make sure you are booting via the Solus boot loader (if possible), or update grub on the distro that own the boot loader, see [Legacy/BIOS installation](/articles/troubleshooting/installation-issues/en/#legacy-bios-installation).
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- Another possibility is that the `ESP` has run out of space so the kernel cannot be copied over to it. You can debug why this isn't happening via `sudo CBM_DEBUG=1 clr-boot-manager update`. This will output all information on the process, where it may be failing, or that it is working correctly.
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- Another possibility is that the `ESP` has run out of space so the kernel cannot be copied over to it. You can debug why this isn't happening via `sudo CBM_DEBUG=1 clr-boot-manager update`. This will output all information on the process, where it may be failing, or that it is working correctly.
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@ -22,4 +22,4 @@ Legacy installations on Solus use the Grub boot loader on an MBR disk. Only one
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### EFI
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### EFI
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EFI allows for multiple boot loaders to be installed, which means you can boot the Solus boot loader directly. To ensure you are booting Solus you need to boot `Linux Boot Manager` from the EFI options. Common keys for bringing up a boot menu or the options during boot are hitting `Esc/F2/F9/F10/F11/F12` during boot (this differs per motherboard). If a boot loader for another OS is not listed in the menu, then it is not correctly registered (and therefore not installed correctly). You can make the Solus boot menu appear via [Displaying the Solus boot menu on boot](/articles/troubleshooting/boot-management/en/) which should be able to boot windows (as it's registered with UEFI properly) as well as Solus, but not other systems.
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EFI allows for multiple boot loaders to be installed, which means you can boot the Solus boot loader directly. To ensure you are booting Solus you need to boot `Linux Boot Manager` from the EFI options. Common keys for bringing up a boot menu or the options during boot are hitting `Esc/F2/F9/F10/F11/F12` during boot (this differs per motherboard). If a boot loader for another OS is not listed in the menu, then it is not correctly registered (and therefore not installed correctly). You can make the Solus boot menu appear via [Displaying the Solus boot menu on boot](/articles/troubleshooting/boot-management/en/#displaying-the-solus-boot-menu-by-default-on-boot) which should be able to boot windows (as it's registered with UEFI properly) as well as Solus, but not other systems.
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