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    Solved Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance

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    grub linux fedora learning education
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    • travisdh1T
      travisdh1 @DustinB3403
      last edited by

      @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

      @notverypunny not many 2 and a recovery.

      But I have seen many more on past systems so I wanted to take a look into it. To see if this is/was something most people are managing manually.

      Do you have an Ubuntu system that has been around a while? Look at one of those and you'll see one reason why me and @JaredBusch actively hate Ubuntu.

      DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • DustinB3403D
        DustinB3403 @travisdh1
        last edited by

        @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

        @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

        @notverypunny not many 2 and a recovery.

        But I have seen many more on past systems so I wanted to take a look into it. To see if this is/was something most people are managing manually.

        Do you have an Ubuntu system that has been around a while? Look at one of those and you'll see one reason why me and @JaredBusch actively hate Ubuntu.

        No I don't have any remaining systems of importance that I've seen this on. Just from recollection did this come to mind.

        travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • travisdh1T
          travisdh1 @DustinB3403
          last edited by

          @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

          @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

          @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

          @notverypunny not many 2 and a recovery.

          But I have seen many more on past systems so I wanted to take a look into it. To see if this is/was something most people are managing manually.

          Do you have an Ubuntu system that has been around a while? Look at one of those and you'll see one reason why me and @JaredBusch actively hate Ubuntu.

          No I don't have any remaining systems of importance that I've seen this on. Just from recollection did this come to mind.

          Lucky

          DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DustinB3403D
            DustinB3403 @travisdh1
            last edited by

            @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

            @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

            @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

            @DustinB3403 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

            @notverypunny not many 2 and a recovery.

            But I have seen many more on past systems so I wanted to take a look into it. To see if this is/was something most people are managing manually.

            Do you have an Ubuntu system that has been around a while? Look at one of those and you'll see one reason why me and @JaredBusch actively hate Ubuntu.

            No I don't have any remaining systems of importance that I've seen this on. Just from recollection did this come to mind.

            Lucky

            I've got XOCE in my lab, but that's not critical to my day to day.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • dbeatoD
              dbeato @travisdh1
              last edited by

              @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

              @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

              As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

              RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

              Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

              This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

              For Debian/Ubuntu it is

              sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
              

              But that should happen when you do update as you don't want an old lingering kernel to cause trouble...

              dbeatoD travisdh1T 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • dbeatoD
                dbeato @dbeato
                last edited by

                @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                For Debian/Ubuntu it is

                sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
                

                But that should happen when you do update as you don't want an old lingering kernel to cause trouble...

                More here
                https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RemoveOldKernels

                black3dynamiteB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • travisdh1T
                  travisdh1 @dbeato
                  last edited by

                  @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                  @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                  @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                  As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                  RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                  Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                  This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                  For Debian/Ubuntu it is

                  sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
                  

                  But that should happen when you do update as you don't want an old lingering kernel to cause trouble...

                  Should happen, and does happen, are two different things in Ubuntu.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • black3dynamiteB
                    black3dynamite @dbeato
                    last edited by

                    @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                    @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                    @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                    @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                    As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                    RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                    Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                    This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                    For Debian/Ubuntu it is

                    sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
                    

                    But that should happen when you do update as you don't want an old lingering kernel to cause trouble...

                    More here
                    https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RemoveOldKernels

                    It only works if we set up unattended upgrade to remove old kernels.

                    dbeatoD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • dbeatoD
                      dbeato @black3dynamite
                      last edited by

                      @black3dynamite said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                      @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                      @dbeato said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                      @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                      @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                      As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                      RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                      Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                      This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                      For Debian/Ubuntu it is

                      sudo apt-get autoremove --purge
                      

                      But that should happen when you do update as you don't want an old lingering kernel to cause trouble...

                      More here
                      https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RemoveOldKernels

                      It only works if we set up unattended upgrade to remove old kernels.

                      Correct

                      M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • M
                        manxam @dbeato
                        last edited by

                        OMG, so this.. If using unattended upgrades, make sure autoremove is configured properly.
                        I had a box take a dump because it ran out of space in /boot with a ridiculous number of old kernels installed.
                        Trying to run autoremove failed because it requires some space to do its work.

                        Had to manually remove a bunch of files before autoremove could run...

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • stacksofplatesS
                          stacksofplates @travisdh1
                          last edited by

                          @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                          @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                          As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                          RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                          Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                          This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                          You can install without /boot. IIRC there is a other config change with unattended-upgrades to auto remove kernels.

                          travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • travisdh1T
                            travisdh1 @stacksofplates
                            last edited by

                            @stacksofplates said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                            @travisdh1 said in Grub Entries cleanup and maintenance:

                            @DustinB3403 You never touch grub yourself. You let the system take care of it for you when it adds or removes kernels.

                            As to removing old kernels, it depends on the distribution you use. A good distro just takes care of this for you. The annoying ones make you do it manually.

                            RedHat/CentOS/Fedora = automatically cleans up older kernels. You don't do anything and it will keep a sane number by default. I think it's 4 and a recovery option.

                            Debian/Ubuntu = keeps all kernels till you manually remove them. I forget offhand what the command is besides it's an option for apt.

                            This is one reason I'm happily moving things from the old rental box to my new server for my home lab. The old rental box has Ubuntu with a tiny little 256MB /boot partition. It can keep ~3 kernels, and that's it, ugh!

                            You can install without /boot. IIRC there is a other config change with unattended-upgrades to auto remove kernels.

                            You normally can, yes. Since my current home lab box is a rental, I could only choose from the options they gave me at the time. Today, they'd let you use your own iso, but still wouldn't recommend them for anything other than a test lab.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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