Safest way to clean up boot partition - Ubuntu 14.04LTS-x64, Ubuntu 16.04LTS-x64
Case I: if /boot is not 100% full and apt is working
1. Check the current kernel version
$ uname -r
function logColor(color, args) { | |
console.log(`%c ${args.join(' ')}`, `color: ${color}`); | |
} | |
const log = { | |
aliceblue: (...args) => { logColor('aliceblue', args)}, | |
antiquewhite: (...args) => { logColor('antiquewhite', args)}, | |
aqua: (...args) => { logColor('aqua', args)}, | |
aquamarine: (...args) => { logColor('aquamarine', args)}, | |
azure: (...args) => { logColor('azure', args)}, |
$ uname -r
#!/bin/sh | |
#Check the Drive Space Used by Cached Files | |
du -sh /var/cache/apt/archives | |
#Clean all the log file | |
#for logs in `find /var/log -type f`; do > $logs; done | |
logs=`find /var/log -type f` | |
for i in $logs |
<?php | |
/** | |
* UUID class | |
* | |
* The following class generates VALID RFC 4122 COMPLIANT | |
* Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUID) version 3, 4 and 5. | |
* | |
* UUIDs generated validates using OSSP UUID Tool, and output | |
* for named-based UUIDs are exactly the same. This is a pure | |
* PHP implementation. |