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- How to free up some disk space on my Linux machine?
One cause of invisible disk space usage on Linux is if a program creates a log file, and writes a lot of log messages, and something else deletes the log file The file isn't deleted until all programs close it, but now it doesn't have any name so you can't find it In this case a reboot would free the space and there's probably a tool somewhere to find these files
- server - How do I free up disk space? - Ask Ubuntu
My Ubuntu cloud server has left only 900MB of disk space I'll just empty the directory tmp and wondering if there is any other location to clean up
- Root drive is running out of disk space. How can I free up space?
If you want to recover space on the root partition, moving usr to a different partition is a possible solution From comments: Preserve the permissions when copying, i e better use the command line if you are unsure what your file manager will do The right way to this, is to mount a new filesystem to usr or use mount --bind
- disk usage - How can I free space from a massive 39. 5GB var log . . .
I just got a message from the default disk analyses software (Baobab) that I only have 1GB left on the hard drive After some search, I found that the var log folder is the cause of this Some f
- After removing VMs how do I free hard disk space allocated by Virtual . . .
After a security message you will have the option to free the space occupied on you hard disk by deleting the virtual hard disk file or to keep this file for further usage:
- hard drive - How do I free up more space in boot? - Ask Ubuntu
In this situation one cannot remove old kernels using apt-get because the fscking boot partition has no space left on device One can do this using "dpkg -P" followed by cleaning up the corresponding entry in boot (to free space) and var lib initramfs-tools (the initrd image will not be generated)
- How to deal with snap using a lot of storage space? - Ask Ubuntu
I have a partitioned disk with a root partition of 20 GB and a home partition of 60 GB I thought that this would be enough for Ubuntu, but snap is using a lot of storage space
- What do I do when my root filesystem is full? - Ask Ubuntu
Now this is only a point of note, since disk caching doesn't reserve that space in memory; it would yield the used ram space to other programs that need it when they request it (that's just how disk caching works), but it's a needless use of resources loading 14 5gb of deleted files into ram every time I booted Hope it helps!
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