Hello All, Quite sorry never thought of the RPM method. That should be the way to as mentioned by Anand.
Cheers, Aly. On Wed, 2003-08-20 at 16:13, Anand Buddhdev wrote: > Aly Dharshi writes: > > > Technically you shouldn't remove these, they help you to rollback in > > case there is an issue with the updated kernel, but look in /boot and > > VERY CAREFULLY delete the old stuff. > > Noooooo! This is NOT a good idea. > > Use only the rpm command to remove an older kernel package. Deleting > kernel-related files from /boot by hand can lead to costly mistakes. > > -- > Anand Buddhdev -- Aly S.P Dharshi [EMAIL PROTECTED] Southern Alberta Digital Library Project "A good speech is like a good dress that's short enough to be interesting and long enough to cover the subject" -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list