On 08/31/2017 07:50 PM, Jacco Ligthart wrote:
On 09/01/17 00:30, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
On 08/31/2017 10:09 AM, Fabian Arrotin wrote:
On 31/08/17 14:34, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
On 08/22/2017 03:36 PM, Michael Schumacher wrote:
Nicolas,
Does someone use a bananapi on centos ? I'm using it for a long time, and I'm still on 4.2 kernel. Every time I try to install a newer I got a lot of errors during install, or yum get stuck on "cleaning..". The last time I success to install it, it's not very stable...
looks like you ran into the problem with a too small /boot partition. I had that problem too. Increasing the size of the /boot partition to about 10G solves the problem. This is a problem of the Centos installation image. I believe Robert had the same issue.
Catching up. Was off on another project, writing a guide to build an ECDSA PKI....
Yes, I hit the out of space.
What we need is for someone to fix the update-boot script to rip out old kernels. We are use to this with the mainline platforms. We should get it here. Also Fedora-arm has it...
Bob
Welcome to OSS ! "submit patch" [TM] :-)
To do that I would have to:
Know what files are related to a kernel Know how to identify the oldest kernel, or rather which kernels are the older of N kernels. Know how to, in a script, parameterize the selection of a kernel and all its files
And I come up empty on all the above. I can write simple scripts, and Professor Goggle is good at giving me short lessons to, at times, expand my horizons.
But this is not something I am going to tackle. I will just put up with things as they are.
I guess it is a bit easier than that, we have a package manager for this!
find the installed kernel packages and remove the ones you don't want any more. If you always want only x kernels installed, have a look at "installonly_limit" in yum.conf
Not sure which kernel we're talking about, but if this is the raspberry rpm, there used to be a 'post' script in the rpm what makes a initrd file after install. these initrd things are not used during boot (on a raspberry at least). Removing those will also save you ~ 25M per kernel version. better yet, adjust the spec file to not make them :)
Jacco,
You may remember that I am the Cubieboard guy from back when I was using RSEL6. :)
On the Cubieboard Centos7 image, that can be altered once installed for other uboots (but you have to get the other uboots from an existing install), kernels are easier than on RPi. Or at least I seem to recall a message about this.
Perhaps by Centos8, 64 bit ARM will be affordable.
Bob