@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
(Correction: it's a 12.04 LTS installation, as the console output
shows.)
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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