I've been enjoying my time with Fedora, but I've hit a snag. Initially, I set my boot partition size to 1GB based on old guidelines, but the current recommendation is 2GB, and it's filling up quickly. I'm considering transferring everything from my boot partition to an external drive, then booting from a live USB of Fedora to delete and recreate the boot partition with a larger size. Is this a viable plan, or will it lead to complications?
3 Answers
Honestly, managing the number of kernels in your boot partition can help a lot. You really shouldn't have more than 2 or 3 at a time; having too many can clutter things up. Check what's in there—sometimes, older kernels just sit around and take up useful space. You could also look into settings that limit the number of kernel modules downloaded if you're using them.
You’re on the right track! Your plan should work as long as you have enough space and recreate the new boot partition with the same filesystem type. Just make sure to keep everything else—like partition numbers and flags—consistent to avoid bootloader issues. If your disk is already filled, consider shrinking your largest partition first to free up some space for the new boot partition.
Before you proceed with resizing, what exactly is taking up all the space in your boot partition? Generally, 1GB should be sufficient unless Fedora is doing something unusual. You might want to check the size of your kernel images or unnecessary old kernels that might be lingering there.

It got to 600MB really quickly since I installed a week ago. Seems like a lot for a boot partition!