Updates
Jay Turner
jkt at redhat.com
Tue Dec 23 11:41:12 UTC 2003
On Tue, Dec 23, 2003 at 12:17:15AM -0500, Krikket wrote:
> 1> I updated the kernal. Assuming that everything is working fine (I
> haven't confirmed this, and suspect some problems) how do I remove the old
> kernam, from the harddrive? I only have a 4 GB on my harddrive, so the
> extra space would be handy...
'rpm -q kernel' will show all of the kernels installed on the system
'rpm -e kernel-<version>-<release>' will remove the kernel from your system
For example:
[haring
(root):i686]# rpm -q kernel
kernel-2.6.0-0.test8.1.66
kernel-2.6.0-0.test9.1.67
kernel-2.4.22-1.2115.nptl
kernel-2.4.22-1.2129.nptl
kernel-2.4.22-1.2135.nptl
Then you could:
(root):i686]# rpm -e kernel-2.4.22-1.2115.nptl
>
> 2> Before I upgraded the kernal, I was able to SSH in to the laptop from
> the outside world. (For the moment, I have it set up as a server, to help
> test other things. This is only temporary.) Now when I attempt to "ssh
> foobaz.net", I'm getting a connection refused.
As 'root', try running
'service sshd status'
which will show the status of the server process which responds to ssh
requests. If you get back a message that the service isn't running, then
you've found the problem, in which case, do the following:
'service sshd start' <- will start up the sshd daemon
'chkconfig --level 345 sshd' <- will put entries in initscripts to start
up sshd in runlevel 3, 4, and 5 so that
it starts the next time you boot the
machine
- jkt
--
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Jay Turner, QA Technical Lead jkt at redhat.com Red Hat, Inc.
Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one.
- Albert Einstein
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