*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1624644 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1624644
happened to me too. plenty of space left on /usr, but no inode left,
ended up manually deleting some folders in /usr/src. I thought those are
removed when I purge kernels using purge-old-kernels command.
--
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1624644 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1624644
@Nils Toedtmann +1. Indeed, this is not about unattended-upgrades.
@Brian Murray, Thanks, I hope you are right, and marking this a duplicate leads
to solving this 5+ year bug.
Regards.
--
You received
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1624644 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1624644
Bug 1624644 has bug tasks for multiple packages all of which are upgrade
mechanisms. This bug was marked as a duplicate of the other, after a
meeting of the Ubuntu Foundations team (developers of Ubuntu), be
This report was marked being a duplicate of
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/unattended-
upgrades/+bug/1624644. But it is not specifically about unattended-
upgrades; various upgrade mechanisms run into this same issue. Hence
this bug report not a duplicate.
** This bug is no longer a dup
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1624644 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1624644
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 1624644
By default settings unattended-upgrade does not automatically remove
packages that become unused in conjunction with updating by other software
--
** Tags added: rls-bb-incoming
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.lau
Ben, it would probably be best to file a new bug; this one is filed
against update-manager, which I suspect isn't in use on the server in
question. Maybe file it against apt, since the /etc/kernel/postinst.d
/apt-auto-removal file that should have managed this is owned by apt.
Thanks
--
You rece
This bug was the root cause of a site outage at my company over the
weekend. We're on 16.04.1.
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
Just crashed my email server... sigh
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bu
I created a high level tool called linux-purge to recover system when
this problem appears.
In this case you would run
sudo linux-purge --fix
(It may let you choose which kernel to purge interactively.)
The script can be used for automatic removing of old kernels, if run as
cron job or as systemd
I think expected behavior would be that Software Updater refuses to
start update, and displays error dialog instead, if the update would
consume all left inodes. There is a check for free space i.e.
self.cache.checkFreeSpace() python method, but apparently it does not
catch this case. See also Bug
> ** This bug is no longer a duplicate of bug 1357093
Thank you for this.
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage notifica
** This bug is no longer a duplicate of bug 1357093
Kernels not autoremoving, causing out of space error on LVM or Encrypted
installation or on any installation, when /boot partition gets full
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed t
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 1357093 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1357093
** This bug has been marked a duplicate of bug 1357093
Kernels not autoremoving, causing out of space error on LVM or Encrypted
installation or on any installation, when /boot partition gets full
--
Yo
As for #21, I found out that even dpkg --purge needs some free inodes
under /var. My script can handle it, if /var is in the same partition as
/usr/src; it just removes the selected header version's directories from
/usr/src and purges the related versioned kernel packages by dpkg
thereafter. I do
As for Unattended Upgrades, you can configure it to remove unneeded packages
automatically before a dependency problem or an inode problem occur:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Lubuntu/Documentation/RemoveOldKernels
I am not sure, if it works on 12.04, though, but I have used it successfully in
Does purging some header package by dpkg --purge work, if the system has
ran out of free inodes? As for broken dependencies, it works better than
apt-get (provided that you list all depending packages when purging).
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, wh
@algal: "My big takeaway from this is that I was naive to think
unattended-upgrades could run for years unattended, like a router".
Some might say that the naive ones were the devs who implemented
unattended upgrades without thinking through the possible failure
scenarios. Of course I couldn't po
@pabouk Hi. Thanks so much for the help!
In fact I wasn't able to use apt-get remove, because it tried to do apt-
get update first, which failed because of the inode exhaustion.
I wasn't comfortable removing anything manually because I didn't know
which files were safe to remove. All but one of
@algal If your system is able to remove packages (apt-get remove) do the
following:
1. List installed kernel headers packages:
dpkg --get-selections | grep -E '^linux-headers-[1-9].+[[:space:]]install$'
2. Remove the oldest ones (replace ...):
sudo apt-get purge linux-headers-...
or
sudo apt-get
(Correction: it's a 12.04 LTS installation, as the console output
shows.)
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage notificat
I have just encountered this issue on an Ubuntu 14.04 LTS instance. It
was setup in early 2014, and has had only a light workload serving an
API backend for a medical education system in use by many doctors.
Ironically, it seems to be _because_ I enabled unattended-upgrades that
the system now can
This just hit me on 14.04 LTS.
Any ETA on a fix?
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage notifications about this bug go t
This bug is quite annoying. I ran into it, too. And I tend to be more
one of the "more regular users" that doesn't see an "easy high lever
approach to solve this", as the reporter said.
Please build a cleanup script into the upgrade procedure that purges all
kernel files and headers of versions mo
My workaround:
dpkg --get-selections | grep 'linux-'
dpkg --get-selections | awk '/linux-(headers|image)-[0-9]\./ { print $1 }' |
grep -v "$(uname -r | sed -e 's/-generic//')" | sort -r -V -t- -k3 | tail -n+4
| xargs -r apt-get -qq -y purge
apt-get -qq -y install linux-{headers,image}-$(uname -r)
How can we increase the severity/importance here to get attention? When this
happens, usually we can get out of it, but I ran into this annoying situation
of conflicting packages. I couldn't do the usual
https://ubuntugenius.wordpress.com/2011/01/08/ubuntu-cleanup-how-to-remove-all-unused-linux-
(had to manually temporarily move stuff to a different partition from
/usr/src)
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Title:
linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.
To manage not
Note that automatic updates (e.g. "unattended-upgrades") will even more
likely bring you into this situation. And because of bug #1267059, even
then you set 'Unattended-Upgrade::Remove-Unused-Dependencies true'. Not
good for a LTS.
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of
This issue made an upgrade fail in the middle which left my system
(12.04.5 LTS) with broken dependancies that are not trivial to solve:
"apt-get -f install" fails due to lack of inodes. "apt-get autoremove"
refuses to run due to broken deps, and so does "apt-get remove -f
$SOME_OLD_KERNEL_PACKGES"
Yes, I'm an experienced user and I too have spent a lot of time tracking
down why a 12.04 LTS update failed. The system has separate / and /home
partitions, and the / partition is 15GB, yet "No space left on device"
was suggested as the likely cause. There are many dozens of old
kernels.
At the
This is really annoying bug. Even experienced user who never encountered
a problem with consumed inodes will spend a lot of time finding the
cause of the problem. The error message "No space left on device" does
not suggest that the problem is with inodes.
The update process should certainly remov
I just ran into this issue with Ubuntu 12.04, after using it for more
than a year.
I have to say that it's very embarrassing to spend some time to find the
root cause of an update manager crash due to full inode because of
ancient linux headers. These files should be removed by the system on
regul
I've a Dell Inspiron mini which came with Ubuntu installed. It's
running 12.04 lts and does very little apart from tv listings and
monitoring email (it's too small for regular use). Yet it ran out of
inodes as shown by df -i when the drive was about half-full according to
df -h.
This borked my a
I'd also suggest that the system warns a user when a filesystem is close
to running out of inodes, in a similar fashion to the low disk space
warning.
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089
Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.
** Changed in: update-manager (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195
Titl
I also have just run into this problem on an installation of Ubuntu
Lucid, owned by a non-technical user.
The machine had become unusable - many programs could not run, including
the package manager. Symptoms were totally baffling for the user:
although some errors appear claiming that there is no
This just happened to me on another 10.04.4 server installation. All
while trying to upgrade kernel versions. This is an LTS version, and it
has support until April 2015, however the old headers are still
accumulating and eating inodes.
Please, I beg of you, take notice of this issue.
$ una
37 matches
Mail list logo