Wastage of memory due to multiple compiled kernels copies .
Hello ,
During the course , I had compiled some 7-8 kernels by that i mean different versions or the same kernel version multiple times due to some issues , so now these copies of the compiled kernels stay in my memory and are taking up a lot of space (almost ~70GB) . Is there a way i can delete a copy or any of the kernel version that i am not using right now ?
Also how much storage do you keep reserved for kernel development in your system ?
Comments
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Hi there,
If you have installed them, you just need to delete them from these paths:
/lib/modules/$KVER /boot/vmlinuz-$KVER /boot/initr*-$KVER
This is how I do it on Arch Linux using
fish(I just keep my most recent build and thelinuxpackage kernel):set -l old_imgs (ls /lib/modules | grep -Ev "^$(uname -r)\$|arch" | sort) for old_img in $old_imgs echo Purging v$old_img... sudo rm -rI /usr/lib/modules/$old_img \ /boot/vmlinuz-$old_img \ /boot/initramfs-$old_img.img end sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfgIf you are working with different Linux trees, you can reduce disk usage by adding each tree as a new remote and fetching, instead of cloning the entire tree again. This roughly minimizes the size of each tree (normally 5–6 GB) to around ~1.5 GB per new remote. Unfortunately, there's no way around needing at least 30~40 GB for kernel development if you are actively working on different subsystems with different trees. Especially if you are keeping your different builds.
2 -
If you're using Ubuntu or Debian, there are apt-get commands to remove kernel versions (purge). It might be a better option than removing folder contents manually. Make sure you're not removing a kernel you are currently using.
0 -
@hannelotta said:
If you're using Ubuntu or Debian, there are apt-get commands to remove kernel versions (purge). It might be a better option than removing folder contents manually. Make sure you're not removing a kernel you are currently using.Note that
aptcan't detect custom kernels/initramfs images installed using/sbin/installkernel(i.e., viamake install). It only manages kernels installed from the repositories, and removes them based on the file list found in:/var/lib/dpkg/info/<packagename>.list0 -
@imanseyed You are right! I just realized the custom installed kernels are not listed with
dpkg --list | grep linux-image. Thanks for the clarification.0
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