On 10/12/07, Scott Moseman <scmoseman at gmail.com> wrote: > > I'm running the most recent kernel available, and I've never had a > problem with any past kernels, so I don't believe there's any reason > to keep all of them. I guess kernels get a fresh install instead of > an upgrade? Can I safely rpm-e the old kernel packages? Should this > be something I do through yum instead? yum install yum-utils package-cleanup --oldkernels --count 2 (Increase the count to keep more kernels.)