Hello. The previous kernel files are not automatically removed for
safety reason. If the new kernel work wrong, you can always use the old
one. So you need to remove old kernels manually using package manager.
It is not a bug in Ubuntu, so I am closing this bug report. Feel free to
continue to rep
The issue was indeed because of not enough space left in /boot, which
may have appeared obvious to some but has been part of my continuing
learning experience with ubuntu.
Here is what I did in case it is useful for someone in the same boat.
I copied all the files in /boot related to the old kern
Hi Pedro
Here is the output of df -hT
/dev/sda6 ext39.2G 3.2G 5.6G 37% /
varrun tmpfs 1005M 240K 1005M 1% /var/run
varlock tmpfs 1005M 0 1005M 0% /var/lock
udev tmpfs 1005M 72K 1005M 1% /dev
devshm tmpfs 1005M 12K 1005M 1% /dev/shm
lrm
it seems that you don't have enough space in your disc, can you check
with df -hT ? thanks.
** Changed in: update-manager (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided => Low
Status: New => Incomplete
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Updating problem after upgrading from 7.10 to 8.04
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/227459
You rec