If there are many old kernels in there, you can probably remove the oldest 
one(s) to make room for newer ones.

I've run into problems where the yum update didn't work because there wasn't 
enough room in /boot; my notes for updating now include removing old kernels 
first before running updates.

---
Mike VanHorn
Senior Computer Systems Administrator
College of Engineering and Computer Science
Wright State University
265 Russ Engineering Center
937-775-5157
michael.vanh...@wright.edu

On 10/10/17, 9:55 AM, "CentOS on behalf of KM" <centos-boun...@centos.org on 
behalf of info...@yahoo.com> wrote:

First off - let me say I am not an administrator.   I need to know if there is 
an easy way to increase my /boot partition.  When I installed CentOS 6 after 
running 5, it was my oversight not to increase the /boot size.  it's too small 
and I can't do yum updates.
if it's not easy to actually increase it, is it safe to take a chunk in my root 
filesystem (like /new.boot or something) and just mount it as /boot from now on 
so it uses the space or is that not a good idea?  I am sure I could easily copy 
the rpms/kernel stuff over to it and then unmounts the real /boot and mount 
this new area as /boot.
Can you administrators let me know what you think of all this?   Thanks in 
advance.
KM
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