On Tue, Mar 23, 2021 at 10:18:34AM +0100, Reiner Schulz wrote: > Package: apt > Version: 1.8.2.2 > Severity: normal > > Dear Maintainer, > > On 5 of our Debian 10 Server the separate /boot Partition filled up with old > kernels > on a few Server without separate /boot partition are up to 10 old kernel left > > I check if linux-image\* was marked "manual", there where a few on some > Server, but not on all. > > /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal should remove all old kernels but the > last two
No... it creates a config file telling apt which kernels to remove _when you run autoremove_. apt 2.2 automatically removes kernels during apt dist-upgrade / apt full-upgrade (not using apt-get). Did you run autoremove? > > I greped over 23 Debian 10 Server: > ansible DEBIAN_10 -b -m shell -a 'zgrep 'postinst.d' /var/log/apt/term.log* ' > >> grep_term.log 2>&1 > > grep -c -E 'zz-update-grub' grep_term.log > 115 > grep -c -E 'initramfs-tools' grep_term.log > 138 > grep -c -E 'apt-auto-removal' grep_term.log > 2 > > i will attach grep_term.log I'm not sure what this is supposed to tell us, the hook is (usually) silent, so it's not going to appear in the terminal output. > > /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal isn't run after kernel updates I don't believe that. -- debian developer - deb.li/jak | jak-linux.org - free software dev ubuntu core developer i speak de, en