Robert Love wrote:

Thank you!
  Ben and Irwin I used RPM to remove some of the previous kernals
  then was able to run up2date -u to get the latest kernal :-)
  Did not want to remove anything to do with the kernal, if I did not know
it was going to be safe.




In general it's safe to uninstall all kernels that you aren't currently booted with. You should always keep the current kernel for 2 reasons.


1)That new kernel might not boot;-)
2)You might want to load a new module for your current kernel before you reboot. For example might want to mount a cdrom which requires the iso filesystem module.


--
There is no such thing as obsolete hardware.
Merely hardware that other people don't want.
(The Second Rule of Hardware Acquisition)
Sam Flory  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>





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