24.1 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 Build Directory:
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 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 90 Gbytes. However,
40 Gbytes of initial free disk space are still needed to
create temporary files before they can be deleted.
24.2 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.sh --remove-duplicated --cache-dir=build/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.