On 4/5/24 12:11, home user wrote:
On 4/5/24 11:34 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 4/5/24 09:09, home user wrote:
tmpfs 8158696 0 8158696 0% /tmp
/dev/sda3 485348 339555 116097 75% /boot
This looks like just over 100MB which could possibly cause a problem.
It was only in late February, a mere 1 1/2 months ago, that I cut back
by one old kernel. I now have the current kernel + one old kernel + the
rescue kernel. The kernel really grew that much in so short a time?!
....or was the kernel a seed that is now sprouting?!
I remember that. You probably have just enough space to do the upgrade.
I don't recall using the rescue kernel in a while, but I have used older
kernels occasionally. How do I get rid of the rescue kernel? ....or is
there a better solution?
The rescue kernel is primarily for if you change the hardware to
something that is different enough from the previous hardware that the
drivers are not available. It doesn't seem likely that you are going to
do something like that, so you could remove it.
Run the following command:
echo 'dracut_rescue_image="no"' > /etc/dracut.conf.d/02-rescue.conf
Then you can delete the rescue files from /boot and the rescue file from
the loader entries below there.
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