First, svp, pardon my responding in English but I am sitting on Canada's west coast wanting to share a script posted at our Ubuntu Vancouver LoCo's Meetup site. (N.B., I have the script's author's permission to share it with you.)
I have been running Ubuntu on my now ten year old DELL PC for more than six years (now at 12.04 LTS) and have used Kim Kulak's purge-kernel script for the past few years with no problem and with the desired result of retaining the current kernel and one previous kernel. This provides a safety net should one later encounter problems with the current kernel. Is there someone to whom I could send a copy of Kim's script along with the his instructions for consideration and translation of the script's description and instructions for use? Else I could provide the script's location on the Ubuntu Vancouver LoCo Meetup site but access there would require at least a temporary (no-cost) Meetup membership. Whilst I do read French (and bear a truly French name) I do not want to put you through the pain of reading any French text I might write. Je vous remercie d'avoir lu mon message. Georges Le lundi 08 juillet 2013 à 00:39 +0000, [email protected] a écrit : > > Message: 1 > Date: Sun, 7 Jul 2013 16:51:46 -0400 (EDT) > From: Kanouk <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Subject: [Ubuntu-QC] Logiciel pour nettoyer les noyaux > Message-ID: <[email protected]> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; format=flowed > > Bonjour à tous, j'aimerais savoir s'il existe un logiciel pour > nettoyer les anciennes versions du noyau après une mise à jour. > Depuis longtemps je le fais manuellement avec le gestionnaire de > paquets synaptics mais ce serait cool il me semble d'avoir un logiciel > pour ne garder que les deux dernières versions les plus récentes du > noyau au lieu de toujours chercher. > > Alors connaîtriez-vous un logiciel qui fait ça? > > Kanouk :) > -- Ubuntu-quebec mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-quebec
