You should have other kernels if you are Debian based unless you removed all the others with `rm` as others have mentioned. You might want to look into the auto-clean features of you distro, this will allow you to say keep, 3 or 4 kernels in case one fails, such as a regression in a driver you need. If you have no other kernels on your system you will likely be forced to boot from other media, like USB or CD, or DVD. You will want to install the current kernel, but also update grub, it sounds like grub hasn't been updated. Are you building your own kernels or using distro kernels? -Ben _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
- [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel.... David kramer
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel.... Peter Olson
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel.... Rich Pieri
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel.... Mike Small
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel.... Ben Carr
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel..... Jerry Feldman
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel..... David kramer
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kern... Mike Small
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong... Mike Small
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kernel..... David Kramer
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong kern... Ben Carr
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the wrong... David Kramer
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted the w... Derek Martin
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted t... Dan Ritter
- Re: [Discuss] I, uh, deleted t... Rich Pieri
