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Message #23746
[Bug 1675079] Re: 16.04 LTS Partition /boot fills up with Kernel images, gets underwear in a twist
This bug was fixed in the package update-manager - 1:17.10.14
---------------
update-manager (1:17.10.14) artful; urgency=medium
* Offer removal of unused autoremovable kernel packages
(LP: #1624644, #1675079)
* Support package removals in install backends and really remove packages
(LP: #1624644, #1675079)
* Keep PEP 8 checks happy
* Place .keep files in empty directories to keep them when converting the
repo to git (LP: #1758963)
-- Balint Reczey <rbalint@xxxxxxxxxx> Sun, 25 Mar 2018 19:57:57 +0100
** Changed in: update-manager (Ubuntu Artful)
Status: Fix Committed => Fix Released
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Matching subscriptions: Ubuntu 16.04 Bugs
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1675079
Title:
16.04 LTS Partition /boot fills up with Kernel images, gets underwear
in a twist
Status in unattended-upgrades package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in update-manager package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in unattended-upgrades source package in Xenial:
New
Status in update-manager source package in Xenial:
Fix Released
Status in unattended-upgrades source package in Artful:
New
Status in update-manager source package in Artful:
Fix Released
Bug description:
[Impact]
* Update-manager and unattended-upgrades install many kernel packages during the lifetime of a release but does not remove them automatically leading to those packages filling disk space potentially completely filling /boot and making the system unable to install updates or even boot.
* Stable release users are impacted by this bug for years and their systems already collected many autoremovable unused kernel packages, thus they would benefit from backporting the fix greatly.
* The bug is fixed by removing autoremovable (not currently booted) kernel packages when running unattended-upgrades or update-manager. Update manager offers the kernel removals when there are other updates to be installed.
[Test Case]
1. Install kernel packages to be removed, mark them auto-installed
and run apt's kernel hook script to make apt consider them
autoremovable:
sudo apt install -y linux-image-extra-4.4.0-92-generic linux-image-extra-4.4.0-93-generic
sudo apt-mark auto linux-image-extra-4.4.0-92-generic linux-image-extra-4.4.0-93-generic
sudo /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal
2. Also downgrade a package to be upgraded:
sudo apt-get install -y --allow-downgrades ca-
certificates=20160104ubuntu1
3. (update-manager). Run update-manager and observe that kernel
packages are offered for removal in Details of updates.
sudo update-manager
4. (update-manager) Click on Install Now and observe that the kernel
packages are removed.
3. (unattended-upgrades) Run unattended-upgrades manually and observe
the removal of the autoremovable kernel packages:
sudo unattended-upgrade -v
[Regression Potential]
The change may cause update-manager or unattanded-upgrades to remove
used kernel packages or fail to install other package updates.
[Other Info]
The unattended-upgrades fix is uploaded with many other fixes and
those may cause regressions in other areas in unattended-upgrades.
[Original bug text]
On a 16.04LTS system, the /boot partition will eventually fill with
Kernel images, until the point where "apt-get autoremove" can't
complete.
This issue has previously been reported as fixed, but it is not fixed:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/unattended-upgrades/+bug/1357093
Generally what I see is the final kernel image that fills the drive is
incompletely installed (the header package does not make it). "apt-
get autoremove" tries to work, but fails. I must manually remove
kernel images to free enough space.
I see this on a machine used by my elderly parents, where 'Download
and install updates automatically' is set. And on my home machines,
where the setting is elsewhere.
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