This is a text-only version of the following page on https://raymii.org:
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Title       :   Remove unused Ubuntu kernels
Author      :   Remy van Elst
Date        :   28-10-2013
URL         :   https://raymii.org/s/snippets/Remove_Old_Ubuntu_Kernels.html
Format      :   Markdown/HTML
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This one liner will help you remove unused Ubuntu kernels. Ubuntu does not
remove kernels when they install a new one, however the default /boot partition
is relatively small, about 100MB. So after 10 kernels, you can get No Space Left
On Device errors with apt-get upgrading. Then you can eitehr remove them
manually, or use this one liner to automatically remove them all.



   export KERNEL="$(uname -r | grep -Po '([0-9\.\-]*[0-9])?')"; dpkg --get-selections | grep -E "linux-(header|image).*" | grep -iw install | sort | grep -v "$KERNEL" | grep -v "lts" | sed 's/install//g' | xargs dpkg -P


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Here's the command by command explanation:



   export KERNEL="$(uname -r | grep -Po '([0-9\.\-]*[0-9])?')"


The first portion sets the current kernel number in a variable `KERNEL`. It only
takes the number, and greps out any additions like `-generic` or `-server`.



   dpkg --get-selections


The second portion first prints out all available packages.



   grep -E "linux-(header|image).*"


The third portion greps for all packages with either `linux-header` or `linux-
image` in the name.



   grep -iw install


The fourth portion greps out only installed packages.



   sort


The fifth portion sorts the output.



   grep -v "$KERNEL" | grep -v "lts"


The sixth portion filters out the current kernel and the lts kernel package.
Removing those will cause problems.



   sed 's/install//g'


The seventh part strips off the `install` part.



   xargs dpkg -P


The last part actually removes the packages. `xargs` send all the package names
to `dpkg`. Then `dpkg -P` purges the packages. That means, removing them and
removing their configs.

  [1]: https://www.digitalocean.com/?refcode=7435ae6b8212

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