Did you do a "source /etc/profile" after emerging gentoolkit ? On 1 Oct 2003 at 16:45, Kevin Miller, Jr. wrote:
> When I input: > > # qpkg -I -v gentoo-sources > > I get: > > -bash: qpkg: command not found > > Kvin > > On Wednesday 01 October 2003 11:28 pm, Alan wrote: > > On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 03:14:23PM +0000, Kevin Miller, Jr. wrote: > > > How can I remove old kernels from my computer. Currently I have > > > 2.4.20-gentoo-r5, 2.4.20-gentoo-r7 and 2.4.22 (vanilla source). I want > > > to delete the first kernel since I know the second and third kernels are > > > working fine. > > > > Funnily enough I'm doing this on my own system as we speak :) Assuming > > you mean remove the packages and extra files as well: > > > > To find the package names that you have installed for the kernel: > > # qpkg -I -v gentoo-sources > > > > Then unmerge the packages: > > # emerge unmerge <package> > > > > This will remove most of the source files, but not the compiled binary > > files. To remove them just go into /usr/src and rm -rf the directories > > of kernel you don't need anymore. > > > > Then mount /boot and go into there and remove the actual kernel files > > that are un-needed. > > > > As a note, I generally keep two at all times, just in case. IE: > > Currently I have ac-sources-2.4.22-ac4 and -ac1 installed and available > > on boot, but anything before that is gone. This is good for.... well, > > if you're paranoid anyway :) > > > > alan > > -- > Kevin Miller, Jr. > Masters of Public Affairs, > Comparative and International Affairs, Information Systems, and Nonprofit > Management, > School of Public and Environmental Affairs > Indiana University - Bloomington > http://e-civilsociety.org > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > mobile: 812-219-5047 > > > -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
