diff --git a/troubleshooting/newer-hardware-troubleshooting.md b/troubleshooting/newer-hardware-troubleshooting.md index 21361b3c..23bd35d4 100644 --- a/troubleshooting/newer-hardware-troubleshooting.md +++ b/troubleshooting/newer-hardware-troubleshooting.md @@ -20,6 +20,6 @@ sudo qubes-dom0-update kernel-latest Reboot when it's done installing. You can double-check that the boot used the newer kernel with `uname -r`, which prints the version of the currently-running kernel. -Compare this with the output of `rpm -qi kernel | grep Version`. +Compare this with the output of `rpm -q kernel`. If the start of `uname -r` matches one of the versions printed by `rpm`, then you're still using the Linux LTS kernel, and you'll probably need to manually fix your boot settings. If `uname -r` reports a higher version number, then you've successfully booted with the kernel shipped by `kernel-latest`.