Subject: Subject: Re: Amazing problem of /boot

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Larry Brower <larry@xxxxxxxxx>
To: Community support for Fedora users <users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 01:55:22 -0500
Subject: Re: Subject: Re: Amazing problem of /boot


Here, after updating the system (from the GUI, System---->Administration--->Software Update), i see in above two titles of Fedora, and why it is so? but the no. is bracket for two are different, respectively:

'title Fedora (2.6.30.10-105.2.23.fc11.i586)'
'title Fedora (2.6.29.4-167.fc11.i586)'

i am confused why it is so.

thx


This is because you updated which also updated the kernel. The two options are for the two kernels you have installed. The old one and the new one

yes, the two kernels.
 
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tim <ignored_mailbox@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: Community support for Fedora users <users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 14 Jun 2010 17:09:36 +0930
Subject: Re: Subject: Re: Amazing problem of /boot
On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 12:21 +0530, Parshwa Murdia wrote:
> Here, after updating the system (from the GUI,
> System---->Administration--->Software Update), i see in above two
> titles of Fedora, and why it is so? but the no. is bracket for two are
> different, respectively:
>
> 'title Fedora (2.6.30.10-105.2.23.fc11.i586)'
> 'title Fedora (2.6.29.4-167.fc11.i586)'
>
> i am confused why it is so.

When you install updated kernels, they're added to the system, and
previously installed kernels are kept.  The newest one will be at the
top of the list.

This allows you to work around a problem with a kernel, if you have one,
by booting up with one that worked previously.  And on that note, I
recommend keeping more than the default two or three kernels, just in
case some problem sneaks in that takes you a while to notice.  The more
options you have to test with, the better.

You can change the number of kernels that will be kept from within
the /etc/yum.conf file.  There'll be an installonly_limit line like this
"installonly_limit=3" somewhere in that file, or you can add it if there
isn't one.

the line is exactly like 'installonly_limit=3'.
 

On my system, I bumped it up to 6.  That gives me plenty of things to
test problems against, and doesn't waste too much space and updating
time.  The more kernels you keep, the more time yum takes to figure out
dependencies, etc., when you do a "yum update".



--
[tim@localhost ~]$ uname -r
2.6.27.25-78.2.56.fc9.i686

Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored.  I
read messages from the public lists.

but if we have more kernels, it occupies more space, may be less, though it may be good for testing purpose but for disk utility is it okay always to have more than one kernel?

thx
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