website/content/blog/rebuildkernelakmod.md

28 lines
945 B
Markdown

---
title: "Rebuild Kernel Modules with Akmods"
date: 2022-02-04T19:37:04-05:00
draft: false
tags: []
math: false
---
Akmods is the Fedora/Red Hat way of managing kernel modules. In Ubuntu, this is `dkms`. If you're like me and force reboot shortly after performing an update, then you might have not given akmods enough time to compile any extra kernel modules (for example: Nvidia). This meant that I had to boot into an older kernel to try to fix the problem....
Once in the older kernel, you can check the kernel versions by:
```bash
ls /usr/src/kernels/
```
Then select the kernel which you failed to build and run:
```bash
sudo akmods --kernels 5.15.18-200.fc35.x86_64
```
to trigger the rebuild.
Though the better solution is to avoid this problem to begin with.
If you `reboot` not as root, then systemd will check to see if
any process is inhibiting the poweroff. If that's the case,
wait patiently and don't type `sudo reboot`.