Sat, 13 Jan 2024 22:20:18 +0100 - Antony Stone
<Antony.Stone@???>:
Hi Antony
> On Saturday 13 January 2024 at 22:09:56, Adrian Zaugg wrote:
>
> > Hi Alexus
> >
> > "Spazio esaurito sul device" means there is no space left on the device,
> > in this case where /boot is. Free up some space by removing old kernel
> > images:
> >
> > apt purge linux-image-<xxx>
> >
> > Replace <xxx> with the correct ending of an unused kernel package you have
> > installed, like 5.10.0-16-amd64. Do not remove your running kernel though
> > (uname -a). Check before that my guess is correct:
> >
> > df -h
>
> I notice that the OP said:
>
> > > - / and /boot are on the same partition which has several GB of free
> > > space
Indeed. On both machines there are about 95MB left (/ /boot and /Var are on
the same partition).
Yesterday I found this:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=929424
and tried adding `MODULES=dep` to /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/modules
This solved the problem on the laptop, but *not* on the desktop.
The latter has a lot more packages installed... I presume there is a bit less
free space on the partition and maybe this could be the reason (?)...
> Therefore I recommend running the command df -ih as well, just in case it's
> inodes that have run out, rather than file system capacity.
I will try this next time I go to my sister.
How should I read the output of df -ih to check if inodes have run out?
And what should I do in this case?
Thanks.
Regards
alexus
--
The only way humans know to survive is to extinguish themselves.
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