Ideally, it would be nice for a kernel update to keep the previous version and ask the user after reboot to remove the previous version. It usually doesn't require very much to see if network and storage are working.
The problem is to define 'working'. Also, some apps are influenced by kernel and do not work with the new one. How to identify those? etc...
I'm not sure this can be done automatically so somekind of dialog after the reboot with the new kernel might be more appropriate: "Your kernel has been recently updated, would you like to keep the previous version?" Having the multiversion on by default is IMO good, but there should be somekind of mechanism to prevent ending with 10 versions. Maybe simply limiting the number of versions would do the trick? This shouldn't be too difficult to handle? I'm not sure why one would need more than 2 kernel versions. Erik. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-factory+help@opensuse.org