Hi, no you didn't messed it up - the version number causes some confusion from time to time.
If the first 4 digits are the same, you have the right kernel (in other words: content-wise 5.4.0.92.9 is equal to 5.4.0-92.103 - the difference is just that the first one if the source and the second one the binary version).
------- Comment From <email address hidden> 2021-12-03 11:13 EDT-------
(In reply to comment #17)
> Hi, no you didn't messed it up - the version number causes some confusion
> from time to time.
> The last digit can be ignored (it's just the build number).
> If the first 4 digits are the same, you have the right kernel (in other
> words: content-wise 5.4.0.92.9 is equal to 5.4.0-92.103 - the difference is
> just that the first one if the source and the second one the binary version).
Hi, no you didn't messed it up - the version number causes some confusion from time to time.
If the first 4 digits are the same, you have the right kernel (in other words: content-wise 5.4.0.92.9 is equal to 5.4.0-92.103 - the difference is just that the first one if the source and the second one the binary version).
------- Comment From <email address hidden> 2021-12-03 11:13 EDT-------
(In reply to comment #17)
> Hi, no you didn't messed it up - the version number causes some confusion
> from time to time.
> The last digit can be ignored (it's just the build number).
> If the first 4 digits are the same, you have the right kernel (in other
> words: content-wise 5.4.0.92.9 is equal to 5.4.0-92.103 - the difference is
> just that the first one if the source and the second one the binary version).
Thank you!
I've verified the fix!