Well, let me ask you this: Does everything work normally and well on the kernel until you upgrade to 5.4?
If so- Is there any reason to upgrade to 5.4 at this time?
I would be very happy if your hardware is fine and that the installation is fine. If it is just the 5.4 kernel causing breakage, then it may be best to not use that kernel.
It is up to you if you would like to test the HWE ( Hardware Enablement) 5.4 kernel instead of the Generic 5.4 kernel. If you feel like you would like to try that, say so and we can walk through that process.
Otherwise, if you would prefer to wait until a kernel release compatible with your machine is available, you can use the apt-mark hold command to prevent the kernel from being upgraded when you do an upgrade or upgrade all other packages. In terminal, you can Hold the Kernel at current version with
sudo apt-mark hold linux-generic linux-image-generic linux-headers-generic
Possibly, or you can use the Recovery Mode outlined above to choose the Previous Kernel at boot.




. I am sorry, my English is not good.

