Hello,

Finally built a new rig, and wanted to ditch Windows.

Got KDE neon up and running, booted into it, got my browser mostly back to how I like it, ran an update for my video card. I didn’t notice the screen blackout and come back like it normally would for a video update, but I don’t think that has anything to do with my current issue. I tried to restart to make sure it was running, and the update part of discover showed up and said I had a couple hundred updates to get, no big surprise there, since it is a fresh install.

Then it hung on fetching updates, and while I could browse my list of programs, I couldn’t do anything else. So I did a hard shut down and powered back up.

It sticks on some kennel warnings and won’t go any further.

Obviously I can’t really do anything from there that I know of.

I also can’t even get it to boot with the install media. That just sticks on a black screen. I can tell the monitor is actually showing black, as it doesn’t give the “NO SIGNAL” warning. I have no idea what to do from here since I can’t get it to react to anything, much less know how to fix anything if I could get in.

As for what the warnings say, there are 6 or so lines saying the same thing: problem blacklisting hash (-13), and one more that says nvme2: failed to set APST feature (2)

I haven’t put anything on nvme2 yet, I haven’t even formatted it yet, just the primary drive (nvme0). So I’m not sure what could possibly be wrong with it yet.

  • Lil' Bobby Tables@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    New hardware failures tend to follow what’s known as a “bathtub curve” for failures over time-- in one hand, you have a steady climb on the far end because of wear and tear with age; but due to undetectable manufacture faults, there’s another steep rise at the beginning, too. There may be internal issues that simply no one has seen yet.

    So getting a piece of hardware with an early defect is what’s casually called a “bathtub fault”. I know it’s irritating, but let’s not jump to conclusions yet. It might still be fine.

    In the worst case scenario, you might also consider reseting the CMOS if you really can’t get it to boot-- could be a wonky BIOS setting and that would remove that.

    Each mobo has its own thing for that, but you can also pop the battery, flip off the PSU switch, and hold power for thirty seconds to drain the caps, and that will force it back to its defaults. I mean you got it to run once, so it’s probably something stupid.

    Good luck!