[Bug 1960089] Re: Ubiquity Boot Partition for LVM needs to be 2.0 GB for 22.04LTS
Launchpad Bug Tracker
1960089 at bugs.launchpad.net
Sat Feb 5 01:01:29 UTC 2022
Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.
** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1960089
Title:
Ubiquity Boot Partition for LVM needs to be 2.0 GB for 22.04LTS
Status in ubiquity package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Status in ubiquity source package in Focal:
Confirmed
Status in ubiquity source package in Jammy:
Confirmed
Bug description:
Summary:
We propose to increase the LVM /boot partition to 2.0 GB. This
provides the space needed so advanced users can use best practice to
manage up to 3 kernel flavors. The current /boot partition on 20.04
and 22.04 is limited to just 705M, which allows only 3 concurrent
kernels before filling and sometimes locking the system (each image
set takes 180M total; 4 x 180 = 720M > 705M).
Reasoning:
Best practice recommends users keep at least two version of each
kernel flavor in the /boot directory. If a user has 3 kernel flavors
installed (e.g. oem, generic-hwe, and lowlatency-hwe), then one needs
to reserve room for 2 x 3 = 6 kernels.
The system needs the headroom of at least two additional kernels
during any automated clean-up process due to package removal
scheduling. I propose to also reserve room for 2 additional kernels as
a safety measure. Thus the total recommend available space should
accommodate 10 kernels.
Each kernel file set takes up 180M in the /boot partition when used
with Nvidia driver modules. These files include initrd.img,
system.map, and vmlinuz. With future kernel and module growth, this
may surpass 200M soon. Therefore, we suggest planning for 200M for
each kernel.
We therefore request a total LVM /boot partition size of 10 image x
200M = 2.0 GB.
Other Considerations:
When unattended-upgrades works correctly (which does not yet employ
best practice), we have seen users with just a single kernel flavor
over-fill their /boot partitions. This is because unattended-upgrades
can retain up to 4 kernels, while the /boot partition is only large
enough for 3. I am currently working with others to improve the
unattended-upgrades algorithm to use best practice.
The installer could allow users to resize the /boot partition during
installation. In this case, we highly recommend a 2.0 GB default for
the reasons outlined above.
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 20.04
Package: ubiquity (not installed)
ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.14.0-1011.11-oem 5.14.17
Uname: Linux 5.14.0-1011-oem x86_64
NonfreeKernelModules: nvidia_modeset nvidia
ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu27.21
Architecture: amd64
CasperMD5CheckResult: skip
CurrentDesktop: KDE
Date: Fri Feb 4 14:53:36 2022
InstallCmdLine: BOOT_IMAGE=/casper/vmlinuz file=/cdrom/preseed/kubuntu.seed only-ubiquity quiet splash oem-config/enable=true ---
InstallationDate: Installed on 2020-06-10 (604 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Kubuntu 20.04 LTS "Focal Fossa" - Release amd64 (20200423)
SourcePackage: ubiquity
UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)
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