On Sun, 2026-01-18 at 18:44 +1100, Stephen Morris wrote:
It depends on how many kernels you want to retain in a list, but as
soon as you have that many kernels installed the next kernel update
will remove the oldest kernel.
That's not currently in use (as in you booted using it at the time you
were updating kernels).

Sorry, yes, it does depend on whether you are using that kernel, but depending on why you want to retain that kernel, if that reason doesn't require you to continually boot off that kernel, then the "dnf mark" functionality may prevent the kernel from being removed with updates.

regards,
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