Cleaning up Linux boot partition

in #linux7 years ago (edited)

Here's an example set of commands used to clean up a Linux boot  partition. Of course, replace exact image and header numbers with  appropriate version numbers vis-à-vis your machine.

dpkg --list 'linux-image*'
sudo apt-get --purge remove linux-image-3.16.0-41-generic
dpkg --list 'linux-headers**'
sudo apt-get --purge remove linux-headers-3.16.0-41

You can also use df -h to see disk usage before and after.

(Reposted from my tumblr.)

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Just make sure you keep at least one bootable kernel installed. ;)

Nice post.
Just remeber to do:
sudo apt-get autoclean && apt-get autoremove -y
** After you have rebooted your system to the new kernel.

I think you have to sudo the second command too, ie.
sudo apt-get autoclean && sudo apt-get autoremove -y

nop, just one. It's one command.

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An additional step:

ls /boot

Remove all the old files that look something like:

initrd.img-4.4.0-70-generic.old-dkms

These files can take up a lot of room if you have a lot of old kernels.

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