.. SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-SA-2.0-UK Conserving Disk Space ********************* Conserving Disk Space During Builds =================================== To help conserve disk space during builds, you can add the following statement to your project's ``local.conf`` configuration file found in the :term:`Build Directory`:: INHERIT += "rm_work" Adding this statement deletes the work directory used for building a recipe once the recipe is built. For more information on "rm_work", see the :ref:`ref-classes-rm-work` class in the Yocto Project Reference Manual. When you inherit this class and build a ``core-image-sato`` image for a ``qemux86-64`` machine from an Ubuntu 22.04 x86-64 system, you end up with a final disk usage of 22 Gbytes instead of &MIN_DISK_SPACE; Gbytes. However, &MIN_DISK_SPACE_RM_WORK; Gbytes of initial free disk space are still needed to create temporary files before they can be deleted. Purging Obsolete Shared State Cache Files ========================================= After multiple build iterations, the Shared State (sstate) cache can contain multiple cache files for a given package, consuming a substantial amount of disk space. However, only the most recent ones are likely to be reused. The following command is a quick way to purge all the cache files which haven't been used for a least a specified number of days:: find build/sstate-cache -type f -mtime +$DAYS -delete The above command relies on the fact that BitBake touches the sstate cache files as it accesses them, when it has write access to the cache. You could use ``-atime`` instead of ``-mtime`` if the partition isn't mounted with the ``noatime`` option for a read only cache. For more advanced needs, OpenEmbedded-Core also offers a more elaborate command. It has the ability to purge all but the newest cache files on each architecture, and also to remove files that it considers unreachable by exploring a set of build configurations. However, this command requires a full build environment to be available and doesn't work well covering multiple releases. It won't work either on limited environments such as BSD based NAS:: sstate-cache-management.py --remove-duplicated --cache-dir=sstate-cache This command will ask you to confirm the deletions it identifies. Run ``sstate-cache-management.sh`` for more details about this script. .. note:: As this command is much more cautious and selective, removing only cache files, it will execute much slower than the simple ``find`` command described above. Therefore, it may not be your best option to trim huge cache directories.