On 08/16/2018 03:00 PM, Stephen John Smoogen wrote: > On Thu, 16 Aug 2018 at 14:44, Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com> wrote: >> I just installed the new kernel on one of my Cubieboard2s. /boot used >> grew ~130MB. >> >> Challenge is that my next board to update only has 43MB free. It >> currently has 3 kernels on it. >> >> Is there a way to cleanly delete old kernel files prior to the update? >> In this case 4.9.30-203? >> > Are you meaning something like this? > ``` > [smooge at smoogen-laptop ~]$ rpm -q kernel > kernel-3.10.0-693.21.1.el7.x86_64 > kernel-3.10.0-862.el7.x86_64 > kernel-3.10.0-862.2.3.el7.x86_64 > kernel-3.10.0-862.3.2.el7.x86_64 > kernel-3.10.0-891.el7.x86_64 > [smooge at smoogen-laptop ~]$ uname -a # to see what you have running > Linux smoogen-laptop.localdomain 3.10.0-891.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon May > 21 14:10:11 EDT 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux > $ sudo rpm -e kernel-3.10.0-693.21.1.el7.x86_64 > kernel-3.10.0-862.el7.x86_64 kernel-3.10.0-862.2.3.el7.x86_64 rpm -e kernel-4.9.30-203.el7.armv7hl Did nothing. Just came back to the # prompt. And no reduction in space used in /boot and no change in 'ls /boot'. Or at least what I noticed. > ``` >> thanks >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Arm-dev mailing list >> Arm-dev at centos.org >> https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/arm-dev > >