Am 18. Sep, 2017 schwätzte Matt Graham so: > On 2017-09-18 11:00, der.hans wrote: >> one of my Ubuntu systems has a bunch of /boot/initrd files for kernels >> that have been removed. >> >> I believe initrd is generated at kernel package install time ( and >> probably regenerated if certain packages such as firmware are updated ), >> so removing the old initrd files won't bork package management. It's been >> a while since I've reviewed specifics, so no idea if things have changed. >> >> 'dpkg -S ínitrd' doesn't reveal any package ownership for initrd files at >> all. >> 'apt-cache search initrd' doesn't bring up anything useful for this. >> 'dpkg -L' on a kernel package doesn't reveal any initrd files. > [...] >> Purging a kernel that was installed did get rid of the initrd for that >> kernel, so maybe it's matter of reinstalling the old kernels and purging >> them, except that there isn't room to install anything because the initrds >> have filled /boot... > > Move the old initrds to somewhere that has more space, then reboot and see if > anything breaks? dpkg saying that the files are not owned by anything sounds > reasonable if they're built dynamically. Yeah, should totally work, just been a while since I looked at the innards of those packages. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com https://www.PhxLinux.org # An architect who does not believe in privacy may also lack faith # in keeping out the rain" -- John M. Ford, Growing Up Weightless