It might be nice if this could be somehow configured as well. The following configuration options seem potentially useful:
Keep X most recent kernels. Defaulted to 2, this should keep a 'known good' kernel, and the new one, but remove older ones.
Kernel Whitelist: Never delete this kernel revision, this would allow me to keep a 'known good' when I'm running an Alpha version of Ubuntu (as I am now).
This is a *huge* problem on SSD devices, as my netbook only has 16 GiB of space, and 2.4 GiB were consumed with Kernels (I removed a bunch, but I can still remove some more).
It might be nice if this could be somehow configured as well. The following configuration options seem potentially useful:
Keep X most recent kernels. Defaulted to 2, this should keep a 'known good' kernel, and the new one, but remove older ones.
Kernel Whitelist: Never delete this kernel revision, this would allow me to keep a 'known good' when I'm running an Alpha version of Ubuntu (as I am now).
This is a *huge* problem on SSD devices, as my netbook only has 16 GiB of space, and 2.4 GiB were consumed with Kernels (I removed a bunch, but I can still remove some more).