On Saturday 30 August 2003 1:17 pm, someone claiming to be Mike Reinehr wrote: > There's your trouble. You have the files associated with five (5) different > kernels in your boot partition: > > 2.4.9 > 2.4.7-10 > 2.4.18-19.7.x > 2.4.18-24.7.x > 2.4.18-26.7.x > 2.4.18-27.7.x > > It appears that 2.4.18-27.7.x is the last and current kernel, the one you > are booting. It that's the case you can free up a lot of space by deleting > the unused kernel image files. (Just make sure that your lilo or grub > configurations reflect the correct kernel image or you won't be able to > reboot.) <snip> Since he installed all these kernels via up2date (and consequently, rpm), he shouldn't just start rm'ing things. If he uses rpm to remove them, via 'rpm -e', rpm should take care of the necessary grub (or lilo, if RHL 7.x uses that instead of grub) modifications.
Regards, Tim -- RedHat 8.0 Kernel 2.4.20-19.8, KDE 3.1.3, Xfree86 4.2.1 1:25pm up 7 days, 19:22, 1 user, load average: 0.33, 0.22, 0.10 It's what you learn after you know it all that counts _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc -> http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
