On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 04:16:55PM +0100, Colin Law wrote:
> Right, gotit, thanks. I deduce from what I see that 14.04
> automatically uninstalls (or at least makes available for
> autoremoving) all except the current and previous kernel, and all that
> is left is the conf files for previous vers
On 15 August 2014 14:45, Alan Pope wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 14:09, Colin Law wrote:
>> On 15 August 2014 13:55, Colin Law wrote:
>>> On 15 August 2014 13:46, Alan Lord wrote:
>>> ..
Here's a very neat bash command that I stick in ~/bin for this very
purpose:
http://www.to
On 15/08/14 15:14, Barry Drake wrote:
Thanks Alan. That is really neat. I've run the first part of the
command and the three variables are precisely what I want. I'll amend
the script just a little and keep it in my home directory with other
neat little scripts I use from time to time.
I've
On 15/08/14 13:46, Alan Lord wrote:
On 15/08/14 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels.
Here's a very neat bash command that I stick in ~/bin for this very
purpose:
http://www.tolaris.com/2012/07/19/removing-old-kernels-from-ubuntu/
Thanks Alan. That is
On 15 August 2014 14:09, Colin Law wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 13:55, Colin Law wrote:
>> On 15 August 2014 13:46, Alan Lord wrote:
>> ..
>>> Here's a very neat bash command that I stick in ~/bin for this very purpose:
>>>
>>> http://www.tolaris.com/2012/07/19/removing-old-kernels-from-ubuntu/
>>
On 15 August 2014 13:55, Colin Law wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 13:46, Alan Lord wrote:
> ..
>> Here's a very neat bash command that I stick in ~/bin for this very purpose:
>>
>> http://www.tolaris.com/2012/07/19/removing-old-kernels-from-ubuntu/
>
> That only removed one kernel for me (I have lots
On 15 August 2014 13:46, Alan Lord wrote:
> On 15/08/14 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
>>
>> I've gone through an entire development cycle without having to
>> re-install 14.10 - just amazing!
>>
>> I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels. There used to be a
>> very simple gui tool that let
On 15/08/14 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
I've gone through an entire development cycle without having to
re-install 14.10 - just amazing!
I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels. There used to be a
very simple gui tool that let me remove all the ones I didn't want, but
I don't seem to s
On Fri, Aug 15, 2014, at 11:57 AM, Colin Law wrote:
> > It's truncated. Maybe your terminal window is too small? (which is why
> > I suggested making it full screen).
>
> Ah, I see. To get the line
> rc linux-image-extra-3.6.0-030600rc1-generic
> 3.6.0-030600rc1.201208022 i386
On 15/08/14 11:57, Colin Law wrote:
Ah, I see. To get the line rc
linux-image-extra-3.6.0-030600rc1-generic 3.6.0-030600rc1.201208022
i386 Linux kernel image for version 3.6.0 on 32 bit x86 SMP to not
truncate the name I had to extend the window into the second monitor
even though there is emp
On 15/08/14 11:36, Alan Pope wrote:
dpkg -l linux-image*
Gives me a list of kernels, but the names are not the actual package
names. I altered the output for the oldest to the actual package and
removed it with no problem, and it will save me quite a lot of time.
I'll possibly use 'ls linu
On 15 August 2014 11:36, Alan Pope wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 11:31, Colin Law wrote:
>> On 15 August 2014 11:12, Alan Pope wrote:
>>> On 15 August 2014 11:07, Barry Drake wrote:
On 15/08/14 11:02, Alan Pope wrote:
>
> On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
>>
>> If I
On 15 August 2014 11:31, Colin Law wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 11:12, Alan Pope wrote:
>> On 15 August 2014 11:07, Barry Drake wrote:
>>> On 15/08/14 11:02, Alan Pope wrote:
On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
>
> If I want to do it using apt-get, I'm going to have to u
On 15 August 2014 11:12, Alan Pope wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 11:07, Barry Drake wrote:
>> On 15/08/14 11:02, Alan Pope wrote:
>>>
>>> On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
If I want to do it using apt-get, I'm going to have to use the command
for every one which will take a
This command will remove all but your running kernel from the command line:
sudo apt-get remove --purge $(dpkg -l 'linux-*' | sed '/^ii/!d;/'"$(uname
-r | sed "s/\(.*\)-\([^0-9]\+\)/\1/")"'/d;s/^[^ ]* [^ ]* \([^
]*\).*/\1/;/[0-9]/!d')
Source is here:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/2793/how-do-i-r
On 15 August 2014 11:07, Barry Drake wrote:
> On 15/08/14 11:02, Alan Pope wrote:
>>
>> On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
>>>
>>> If I want to do it using apt-get, I'm going to have to use the command
>>> for every one which will take a while. Is there a tool
>>> for automating this ju
On Fri, 15 Aug 2014 11:02:22 +0100
Alan Pope wrote:
> On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake
> wrote:
> > I've gone through an entire development cycle without having to
> > re-install 14.10 - just amazing!
> >
> > I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels. There used to
> > be a very si
On 15/08/14 11:02, Alan Pope wrote:
On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
If I want to do it using apt-get, I'm going to have to use the command for
every one which will take a while. Is there a tool
for automating this just a bit?
Does this command offer to remove some?
sudo apt-get a
On 15 August 2014 10:59, Barry Drake wrote:
> I've gone through an entire development cycle without having to re-install
> 14.10 - just amazing!
>
> I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels. There used to be a very
> simple gui tool that let me remove all the ones I didn't want, but I d
I've gone through an entire development cycle without having to
re-install 14.10 - just amazing!
I now have a very large number of unwanted kernels. There used to be a
very simple gui tool that let me remove all the ones I didn't want, but
I don't seem to see it anymore. If I want to do it u
On 4 May 2013 15:53, Tony Pursell wrote:
> Hi All
>
> Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of unwanted
> kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but I'm still left
> with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having upgraded to Raring. I
> don't mind
On 04/05/13 17:01, A wrote:
On 04/05/13 15:53, Tony Pursell wrote:
Hi All
Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of
unwanted kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but
I'm still left with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having
upgraded to Rarin
On 2013-05-04 16:47, Colin Law wrote:
> On 4 May 2013 15:53, Tony Pursell wrote:
>> Hi All
>>
>> Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of unwanted
>> kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but I'm still left
>> with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despit
On 04/05/13 15:53, Tony Pursell wrote:
> Hi All
>
> Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of
> unwanted kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but
> I'm still left with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having
> upgraded to Raring. I don't mind kee
On 4 May 2013 15:53, Tony Pursell wrote:
> Hi All
>
> Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of unwanted
> kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but I'm still left
> with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having upgraded to Raring. I
> don't mind
On 4 May 2013 15:54, "Tony Pursell" wrote:
>
> Hi All
>
> Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of
unwanted kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but I'm
still left with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having upgraded to
Raring. I don't mind ke
Hi All
Has anyone got any advice or tips on how to safely rid oneself of unwanted
kernel. I thought this was an issue that had been solved but I'm still
left with 5 ver 2.6 and 8 ver 3.0 kernels despite having upgraded to
Raring. I don't mind keeping the latest 3.8 kernel and the 3.5 before that
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