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Cloudron Forum

Apps | Demo | Docs | Install
  1. Cloudron Forum
  2. Feature Requests
  3. Add `apt autoremove`

Add `apt autoremove`

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Feature Requests
aptubuntu
21 Posts 6 Posters 2.9k Views 6 Watching
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    • robiR Offline
      robiR Offline
      robi
      wrote on last edited by girish
      #1

      As Cloudron does automatic security and system updates, it should also clean up unused packages as apt suggests with autoremove

      Conscious tech

      1 Reply Last reply
      3
      • nebulonN Away
        nebulonN Away
        nebulon
        Staff
        wrote on last edited by
        #2

        Currently we use the ubuntu system cron to take care of that. But I agree it was so far far from optimal, especially around kernel updates, which seem to pollute the /boot partition.
        I think we have to build our own mechanism there, essentially our own cron which runs the appropriate apt commands.

        Does anyone here have more experience with this?

        rmdesR 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • nebulonN nebulon

          Currently we use the ubuntu system cron to take care of that. But I agree it was so far far from optimal, especially around kernel updates, which seem to pollute the /boot partition.
          I think we have to build our own mechanism there, essentially our own cron which runs the appropriate apt commands.

          Does anyone here have more experience with this?

          rmdesR Offline
          rmdesR Offline
          rmdes
          wrote on last edited by rmdes
          #3

          @nebulon I think this : sudo apt autoremove --purge
          should be enough to clean up old kernels safely
          edit : The above commands only work on newer systems as all old Linux kernels and headers automatically flagged as no more needed, and thus can be purged.

          this link has all the different ways to remove old kernels safely : https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-18-04-remove-all-unused-old-kernels/

          necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • rmdesR rmdes

            @nebulon I think this : sudo apt autoremove --purge
            should be enough to clean up old kernels safely
            edit : The above commands only work on newer systems as all old Linux kernels and headers automatically flagged as no more needed, and thus can be purged.

            this link has all the different ways to remove old kernels safely : https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/ubuntu-18-04-remove-all-unused-old-kernels/

            necrevistonnezrN Offline
            necrevistonnezrN Offline
            necrevistonnezr
            wrote on last edited by necrevistonnezr
            #4

            @rmdes
            Cloudron is on 16.04, so

            sudo purge-old-kernels && sudo apt autoremove && sudo apt autoclean
            

            should be correct IMHO.

            mehdiM 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

              @rmdes
              Cloudron is on 16.04, so

              sudo purge-old-kernels && sudo apt autoremove && sudo apt autoclean
              

              should be correct IMHO.

              mehdiM Offline
              mehdiM Offline
              mehdi
              App Dev
              wrote on last edited by
              #5

              @necrevistonnezr said in Add `apt autoremove`:

              Cloudron is on 16.04

              Cloudron runs currently on both 16.04 and 18.04, and soon on 20.04

              necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • mehdiM mehdi

                @necrevistonnezr said in Add `apt autoremove`:

                Cloudron is on 16.04

                Cloudron runs currently on both 16.04 and 18.04, and soon on 20.04

                necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezr
                wrote on last edited by
                #6

                @mehdi Right! I even asked for 18.04 back in the day ! 🤖 Alzheimers....

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • girishG Offline
                  girishG Offline
                  girish
                  Staff
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #7

                  I assume this feature is to autoremove stuff is only for removing old kernels? I have to say I have not seen the issue of boot filling up in Ubuntu 18. Has anyone hit this in bionic?

                  Also, ubuntu security updates does not add new packages (only updates existing ones). So, AFAIK, this feature is only for removing kernels and nothing else. I am happy to add some button (instead of an automated cron).

                  mehdiM rmdesR 2 Replies Last reply
                  0
                  • girishG girish

                    I assume this feature is to autoremove stuff is only for removing old kernels? I have to say I have not seen the issue of boot filling up in Ubuntu 18. Has anyone hit this in bionic?

                    Also, ubuntu security updates does not add new packages (only updates existing ones). So, AFAIK, this feature is only for removing kernels and nothing else. I am happy to add some button (instead of an automated cron).

                    mehdiM Offline
                    mehdiM Offline
                    mehdi
                    App Dev
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #8

                    @girish autoremove removes packages which were installed automatically (as dependencies of other packages you installed), and which are not needed anymore.

                    For example, if you install package A manually at version 1.0, which depends on package B, then at a later point in time A gets updated to 2.0 which does not depend on B anymore. Well in this case, B stays installed, but is not necessary, and autoremove removes it.

                    girishG 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • mehdiM mehdi

                      @girish autoremove removes packages which were installed automatically (as dependencies of other packages you installed), and which are not needed anymore.

                      For example, if you install package A manually at version 1.0, which depends on package B, then at a later point in time A gets updated to 2.0 which does not depend on B anymore. Well in this case, B stays installed, but is not necessary, and autoremove removes it.

                      girishG Offline
                      girishG Offline
                      girish
                      Staff
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #9

                      @mehdi Right, but I meant in the context of Cloudron why does one ever need to 'autoremove'? Since Cloudron itself doesn't install packages once installed. Is this for the use case of people installing some packages outside of Cloudron (if so, is it then wise to autoremove stuff?)?

                      mehdiM 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • girishG girish

                        @mehdi Right, but I meant in the context of Cloudron why does one ever need to 'autoremove'? Since Cloudron itself doesn't install packages once installed. Is this for the use case of people installing some packages outside of Cloudron (if so, is it then wise to autoremove stuff?)?

                        mehdiM Offline
                        mehdiM Offline
                        mehdi
                        App Dev
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #10

                        @girish In cloudron's case, yeah I don't see anything other than kernels off the top of my head where this could apply, but it's still possible for dependencies of other packages.

                        In any case, I have personally never seen a case where autoremove broke stuff.

                        girishG 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • mehdiM mehdi

                          @girish In cloudron's case, yeah I don't see anything other than kernels off the top of my head where this could apply, but it's still possible for dependencies of other packages.

                          In any case, I have personally never seen a case where autoremove broke stuff.

                          girishG Offline
                          girishG Offline
                          girish
                          Staff
                          wrote on last edited by girish
                          #11

                          @mehdi hmmm, I went back and checked and indeed the install script does not call autoremove in the end, maybe it should.

                          This feature request started with "As Cloudron does automatic security and system updates", so I just want to point out that neither of those require auto-remove since additional packages are not installed and the security updates are very conservative and not dramatic (like removing deps etc). So, except for this kernel stuff, we don't need autoremove, I think. I don't completely understand why ubuntu itself doesn't have a mechanism for this. Happy to be corrected here though 🙂

                          robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • girishG girish

                            I assume this feature is to autoremove stuff is only for removing old kernels? I have to say I have not seen the issue of boot filling up in Ubuntu 18. Has anyone hit this in bionic?

                            Also, ubuntu security updates does not add new packages (only updates existing ones). So, AFAIK, this feature is only for removing kernels and nothing else. I am happy to add some button (instead of an automated cron).

                            rmdesR Offline
                            rmdesR Offline
                            rmdes
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #12

                            @girish have seen this, but like 2 years ago ?😳

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • girishG girish

                              @mehdi hmmm, I went back and checked and indeed the install script does not call autoremove in the end, maybe it should.

                              This feature request started with "As Cloudron does automatic security and system updates", so I just want to point out that neither of those require auto-remove since additional packages are not installed and the security updates are very conservative and not dramatic (like removing deps etc). So, except for this kernel stuff, we don't need autoremove, I think. I don't completely understand why ubuntu itself doesn't have a mechanism for this. Happy to be corrected here though 🙂

                              robiR Offline
                              robiR Offline
                              robi
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #13

                              Wow this really exploded while I slept.

                              @girish That is not a correct conclusion.
                              @mehdi is correct above.

                              Even with Cloudron not installing anything new, the system will over time end up with orphaned dependencies that can be removed. This includes old kernels.

                              It will not harm the system, only keep it less cluttered and do the right thing(tm). 😉

                              Please do the needful. 🤗

                              Conscious tech

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • mehdiM Offline
                                mehdiM Offline
                                mehdi
                                App Dev
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #14

                                Even if not automatic, I think a button do to it manually would do the job.

                                That plus a warning for admins that the boot partition is nearly full would cover a great majority of usecases i think

                                robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                1
                                • mehdiM mehdi

                                  Even if not automatic, I think a button do to it manually would do the job.

                                  That plus a warning for admins that the boot partition is nearly full would cover a great majority of usecases i think

                                  robiR Offline
                                  robiR Offline
                                  robi
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #15

                                  @mehdi Why give the admin yet another button when it can be eliminated altogether? I'd rather do it on CLI then.

                                  Point is, I don't want to see autoremove whenever I run apt or have to deal with kernels filling up for poorly planned partitions or side-effects of OS vendor releasing lots of kernels and not cleaning up.

                                  Conscious tech

                                  necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • robiR robi

                                    @mehdi Why give the admin yet another button when it can be eliminated altogether? I'd rather do it on CLI then.

                                    Point is, I don't want to see autoremove whenever I run apt or have to deal with kernels filling up for poorly planned partitions or side-effects of OS vendor releasing lots of kernels and not cleaning up.

                                    necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                    necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                    necrevistonnezr
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #16

                                    @robi said in Add `apt autoremove`:

                                    Point is, I don't want to see autoremove whenever I run apt or have to deal with kernels filling up for poorly planned partitions or side-effects of OS vendor releasing lots of kernels and not cleaning up.

                                    If autoremove gets integrated in the Cloudron apt update routine, you wouldn't "see" it?!

                                    robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                                      @robi said in Add `apt autoremove`:

                                      Point is, I don't want to see autoremove whenever I run apt or have to deal with kernels filling up for poorly planned partitions or side-effects of OS vendor releasing lots of kernels and not cleaning up.

                                      If autoremove gets integrated in the Cloudron apt update routine, you wouldn't "see" it?!

                                      robiR Offline
                                      robiR Offline
                                      robi
                                      wrote on last edited by robi
                                      #17

                                      @necrevistonnezr No, as it would be run regularly in the background.

                                      Hence when I run apt install blah manually, it has a low chance of finding it needs to remove something via autoremove.

                                      Conscious tech

                                      mehdiM 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • robiR robi

                                        @necrevistonnezr No, as it would be run regularly in the background.

                                        Hence when I run apt install blah manually, it has a low chance of finding it needs to remove something via autoremove.

                                        mehdiM Offline
                                        mehdiM Offline
                                        mehdi
                                        App Dev
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #18

                                        @robi said in Add `apt autoremove`:

                                        Hence when I run apt install blah manually

                                        Aren't you not supposed to install stuff manually on cloudron?

                                        necrevistonnezrN 1 Reply Last reply
                                        3
                                        • nebulonN Away
                                          nebulonN Away
                                          nebulon
                                          Staff
                                          wrote on last edited by girish
                                          #19

                                          Indeed one shouldn't (install manually) to avoid breaking on updates, but in the end it is still ones own server 😉

                                          1 Reply Last reply
                                          0
                                          • mehdiM mehdi

                                            @robi said in Add `apt autoremove`:

                                            Hence when I run apt install blah manually

                                            Aren't you not supposed to install stuff manually on cloudron?

                                            necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                            necrevistonnezrN Offline
                                            necrevistonnezr
                                            wrote on last edited by
                                            #20

                                            @mehdi Exactly, we're talking about Cloudron background routines, not manual installing on the server.

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