I still think a simpler solution, one that all users, novice or newbie,
could use is a GUI that lists the pertinent information and allows
deletion of any older and unused kernels. This may offend some purists,
but to me, the idea is to make linux easy to use and maintain for those
that
Why not just write a little GUI app for us , so that we "command line
illiterates" can take care of this. We need to select what we want
deleted, just getting rid of the old, I understand, may not be what is
wanted.
Bill
On 05/05/2017 03:13 AM, Michael Baker wrote:
> On booting I am told
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1551623 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1551623
Public bug reported:
I'm not sure. I received the error and was asked if I wanted to report
it. So I clicked yes, saw the details, which I diodn't understand and
here I am.
ProblemType: Package
I can't believe they haven't taken care of this yet. When I go to delete
the older kernels I get denied. I tried some other things I saw
mentioned but, probably because I didn't know what I was doing, they
didn't work for me either. Now, I make sure all my data is on the other
hard drive and
Lance,
I found that the installation creates a 241 meg partician that is a
mirror of the /boot directory. That is what gets filled up. I finally
gave up trying to make more space and reinstalled the system. I am not
Ubuntu literate enough to figure out the command line instructions.
You would
I don't know which kernals are okayu to delete. I have had update
problems before where I was told to delete old, or unused kernals. I
would do this if I could tell which ones to delete.
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