WIFI stopped working after update reboot! [SOLVED]My wireless has suddenly became disabled by hardware switch, BIOS, rfkill, fn+f8 do nothingUbuntu Broken after Interrupted Software UpdateUbuntu hard blocked my wirelessAdding KDE Backports PPA has caused unmet dependencies. How to fix?Turning off Bluetooth also turns off Wi-Fi on HP Pavilion dm4-1150eaWifi stopped working after kernel panicWifi stopped working after update to 15.04Wifi issue after running sudo dkms add ./rtlwifi_new-masterintel centrino wireless n 1030 wireless drop after reboot Ubuntu 16.04WiFi stopped working (DISABLED) in Ubuntu 18.04 on ThinkPad P70

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WIFI stopped working after update reboot! [SOLVED]


My wireless has suddenly became disabled by hardware switch, BIOS, rfkill, fn+f8 do nothingUbuntu Broken after Interrupted Software UpdateUbuntu hard blocked my wirelessAdding KDE Backports PPA has caused unmet dependencies. How to fix?Turning off Bluetooth also turns off Wi-Fi on HP Pavilion dm4-1150eaWifi stopped working after kernel panicWifi stopped working after update to 15.04Wifi issue after running sudo dkms add ./rtlwifi_new-masterintel centrino wireless n 1030 wireless drop after reboot Ubuntu 16.04WiFi stopped working (DISABLED) in Ubuntu 18.04 on ThinkPad P70













0















I logged into my PC as usual and wifi was working as intended, I saw a notification about a system update and how a reboot was required. I followed instruction and rebooted, now my WIFI is no longer working. I've tried rfkill unblock all and restarting, neither have worked.



How do I go about fixing this?



Solved by user Organic Marble: It was the latest kernel update (4.18.0-16-generic), booting into the previous kernel (4.18.0-15-generic) fixed it.










share|improve this question
























  • Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

    – Organic Marble
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

    – Pilot6
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

    – ums
    9 hours ago







  • 2





    Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

    – earthmeLon
    9 hours ago







  • 1





    Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

    – user68186
    7 hours ago















0















I logged into my PC as usual and wifi was working as intended, I saw a notification about a system update and how a reboot was required. I followed instruction and rebooted, now my WIFI is no longer working. I've tried rfkill unblock all and restarting, neither have worked.



How do I go about fixing this?



Solved by user Organic Marble: It was the latest kernel update (4.18.0-16-generic), booting into the previous kernel (4.18.0-15-generic) fixed it.










share|improve this question
























  • Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

    – Organic Marble
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

    – Pilot6
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

    – ums
    9 hours ago







  • 2





    Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

    – earthmeLon
    9 hours ago







  • 1





    Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

    – user68186
    7 hours ago













0












0








0








I logged into my PC as usual and wifi was working as intended, I saw a notification about a system update and how a reboot was required. I followed instruction and rebooted, now my WIFI is no longer working. I've tried rfkill unblock all and restarting, neither have worked.



How do I go about fixing this?



Solved by user Organic Marble: It was the latest kernel update (4.18.0-16-generic), booting into the previous kernel (4.18.0-15-generic) fixed it.










share|improve this question
















I logged into my PC as usual and wifi was working as intended, I saw a notification about a system update and how a reboot was required. I followed instruction and rebooted, now my WIFI is no longer working. I've tried rfkill unblock all and restarting, neither have worked.



How do I go about fixing this?



Solved by user Organic Marble: It was the latest kernel update (4.18.0-16-generic), booting into the previous kernel (4.18.0-15-generic) fixed it.







wireless kubuntu






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago







ums

















asked 10 hours ago









umsums

12




12












  • Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

    – Organic Marble
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

    – Pilot6
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

    – ums
    9 hours ago







  • 2





    Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

    – earthmeLon
    9 hours ago







  • 1





    Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

    – user68186
    7 hours ago

















  • Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

    – Organic Marble
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

    – Pilot6
    10 hours ago






  • 1





    Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

    – ums
    9 hours ago







  • 2





    Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

    – earthmeLon
    9 hours ago







  • 1





    Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

    – user68186
    7 hours ago
















Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

– Organic Marble
10 hours ago





Assuming you got a kernel update (there was one this week) and assuming that is what is killing your wifi, you can boot into the prior kernel and see if it works there. There are a plethora of posts on this stack explaining how to boot into an old kernel.

– Organic Marble
10 hours ago




1




1





Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

– Pilot6
10 hours ago





Please edit your question and add output of lspci -knn | grep Net -A3; rfkill list terminal command.

– Pilot6
10 hours ago




1




1





Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

– ums
9 hours ago






Booting into the previous kernel fixed it, thanks @OrganicMarble ⁽ ´◡`⁾

– ums
9 hours ago





2




2





Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

– earthmeLon
9 hours ago






Just to be clear, you'd likely want to be using the most up-to-date kernel. While it's great you've found a temporary solution, be sure to try to get your wireless working with the new kernel, as well.

– earthmeLon
9 hours ago





1




1





Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

– user68186
7 hours ago





Please don't put solved in the title and the answer in the question. The "Your Answer" window is for the solution to the problem. Please answer your own question and accept it as correct. This will help others.

– user68186
7 hours ago










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