3.12 is going to end support in may 2017
>>60100479
You must abandon i386 and switch to amd64. DO it now.
pacman -S linux
Use a computer made in the last 10 years
My router still on 2.6
should I worry
>>60100554
oh boy
>>60100494
>>60100503
this,
or jump ship to gentoo
>>60100554
Yes, see if you can install libreCMC, *WRT, or Tomato.
>>60100479
to safely upgrade kernels on arch, you first need to fix how arch does upgrades:
https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/16702
>>60100608
I'm using tomato!
>>60100603
what's the command for updating kernel on gentoo?
>>60100717
can't you run a simply command line and update the kernel?
root@unknown:/tmp/home/root# update the kernel
-sh: update: not found
no luck dude am I probably being hacked
>>60100717
Has tomato even been actively developed in years?
>>60100479
if you can't read the wikki and figure it out then upgrading a kernel probably isn't for you. just reinstall with a newer kernel. you've got /home on a separate partition right
>>60100479
pacman -Syu && pacman -S linux
>>60100828
how to specifically upgrade to LTS kernel?
>>60100828
>not just pacman -Sy linux
lol at arch niggers that can't even use package manager
>>60100842
pacman -Syu && -S linux-lts
>>60100858
thank you based arch user
>>60100479
Isn't the kernel normally updated with the whole system after Pacman -Syu? Used to work like that when I used Arch.
>>60100905
You still have to reboot.
>>60100689
A major downside of this would be that /boot fills up each update and you have one more thing to worry about.
Also, there's the linux-lts package, which you can use as a recovery option in case the new kernel fails to even boot.