#!/bin/sh set -e # Author: Steve Langasek # # Mark as not-for-autoremoval those kernel packages that are: # - the currently booted version # - the kernel version we've been called for # - the latest kernel version (determined using rules copied from the grub # package for deciding which kernel to boot) # In the common case, this results in exactly two kernels saved, but it can # result in three kernels being saved. It's better to err on the side of # saving too many kernels than saving too few. # # We generate this list and save it to /etc/apt/apt.conf.d instead of marking # packages in the database because this runs from a postinst script, and apt # will overwrite the db when it exits. eval $(apt-config shell APT_CONF_D Dir::Etc::parts/d) config_file=${APT_CONF_D}/01autoremove-kernels installed_version="$1" running_version="$(uname -r)" version_test_gt () { local version_test_gt_sedexp="s/[._-]\(pre\|rc\|test\|git\|old\|trunk\)/~\1/g" local version_a="`echo "$1" | sed -e "$version_test_gt_sedexp"`" local version_b="`echo "$2" | sed -e "$version_test_gt_sedexp"`" dpkg --compare-versions "$version_a" gt "$version_b" return "$?" } list=$(dpkg -l 'linux-image-[0-9]*'|awk '/^ii/ { print $2 }' | sed -e's/linux-image-//') latest_version="" for i in $list; do if version_test_gt "$i" "$latest_version"; then latest_version="$i" fi done kernels=$(sort -u < "$config_file".dpkg-new <> "$config_file".dpkg-new echo " \"^linux-image-extra-$kernel.*\";" >> "$config_file".dpkg-new echo " \"^linux-signed-image-$kernel.*\";" >> "$config_file".dpkg-new done cat >> "$config_file".dpkg-new <