On 12/8/05, Sim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > simple use swup --remove or rpm -e
Oops, I wasn't explicit enough in explaining what I'm looking for. Removing any one kernel is easy enough, I'm looking for (or will write) a script that automates the process, something like this: 1) make a list of all installed kernels (and sources, etc) 2) check if the latest installed kernel is the active one, abort if not 3) remove all but the latest n kernel versions, depending on how paranoid the admin is Yes this isn't all that hard to do manually, on one machine, but as the number of machines grows it becomes a lot of work. -- Dave K Unix Systems & Network Administrator Mount Laurel NJ _______________________________________________ tsl-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.trustix.org/mailman/listinfo/tsl-discuss
