this post was submitted on 03 Jun 2024
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You can pull it from here https://kernel.org/
However plugging in a new kernel can be a tricky process. Take a backup of your computer and be prepared to potentially troubleshoot it in rescue mode.
Some distributions handle this better than others. As they will be potentially a package you can install instead of downloading source.
I've been fond of opensuse tumbleweed for a more "stable" bleeding edge experience over other popular distros. If you want to avoid the hassle of compiling and installing the kernel yourself I'd suggest this approach.
https://get.opensuse.org/tumbleweed/
Thanks for the link directly to the kernel.
Do you know how to see what kernel is included in the release of a given distro? In other words, when I click download on the Bazzite website (or via GitHub), is it possible to know what kernel version I'm getting?
Bazzite pulls its kernel (fsync) from https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/sentry/kernel-fsync/packages/. In this case, it is based on kernel 6.8.1.
For rpm-based immutable images, you can always check the project's Containerfile for what package is being pulled for the kernel. On most normal distros, you can also boot into the live image, pull the package cache and check the latest package version for the kernel.
EDIT:
An example for fedora in this instance of 'traditional distro' would be to
dnf makecache && dnf info kernel
.Thank you!
To be honest I'm surprised I'm having a hard time finding the precise version from their site.
It appears that they are using the atomic edition of Fedora if that helps you search it down.
I imagine if you downloaded the source for bazzite the kernel information would be in there, I'm on my phone or I would check myself.
No worries, I appreciate the guidance. I'm just getting started so everything helps!