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 ability to update packages and resulted in aptitude
reporting broken packages after an update attempt.  Worse, it became
impossible to login to a graphical desktop.  To recover, I needed to
boot into text mode by amending the grub boot-up commands and deleting
/tmp to free up sufficient inodes to allow the graphical desktop to load
ok. Then I used synaptic to delete the old linux-headers.  The result
was inode usage dropped to a more reasonable 54%.

So yeah, untold numbers of Ubuntu installations are in danger of
mysteriously stopping working because ubuntu does not tidy up after
itself when installing new kernels.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1089195

Title:
  linux-headers will eat your inodes on LTS.

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