On 2009-07-03 16:25, Patrick M. Hausen wrote: > On a current server with 512 MB /, the filesystem is at > 97% after installing a new kernel twice. Can I get rid of > these files somehow or are they necessary, in which case > I will need way bigger root filesystems? > > I mean, get rid automatically and never install them again. > I know the chflags and rm commands ;-) But then the question > of they are needed is still open.
You can find this in /usr/src/UPDATING: 20060118: This actually occured some time ago, but installing the kernel now also installs a bunch of symbol files for the kernel modules. This increases the size of /boot/kernel to about 67Mbytes. You will need twice this if you will eventually back this up to kernel.old on your next install. If you have a shortage of room in your root partition, you should add -DINSTALL_NODEBUG to your make arguments or add INSTALL_NODEBUG="yes" to your /etc/make.conf. However, you should consider increasing the size of your root partition, if possible. It can be extremely handy to have symbol files available whenever there's a crash. :) _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"