Note: Don't use the -y option while removing packages. It's better to let yum tell you it's intentions so you can review them first. If everything looks good, then type y to continue with the remove operation.
2014-06-17 5:59 GMT-05:00 Michael Schwendt mschwendt@gmail.com:
On Mon, 16 Jun 2014 23:39:16 +0800, Someone wrote:
Once you've booted with a newer kernel, you could uninstall older
kernel
packages *and* any kmod packages for those kernels.
What would that look like, in my case?
Since you've referred to "sudo yum update -y", you would also use "yum" to remove installed packages with "yum remove" (see "man yum" or the help output for details). Note that if you specify a package to remove, Yum will also try to remove any dependencies. So, if you specify an old kernel (after checking with "uname -r" that you run a newer one), it will also remove anything that depends on that kernel package.
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