On 2018-03-02 14:43, George from the tribe wrote:
On 03/02/2018 07:55 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 2018-03-02 12:27, Dave Plater wrote:
Now that I think: George, find out where the space is actually used in your "/", maybe there are things you can delete, like a huge log file or /tmp.
Ok, after looking, I found out that the 2 biggest culprits are the journal file and the extra kernels.
So I set the journal configuration file to a 100M limit, and that should help.
Since I use the kernel:stable repository, I get frequent kernel updates, like around every 2 weeks.
Some kernel files are stored in /lib/modules. The kernel source modules are stored in /usr/src. I don't know where other kernel files may be stored. I have kernel-default, kernel-devel, kernel-source, and kernel-syms installed.
Are you sure you need the kernel sources? They are big.
Is there somewhere that I can tell my system to only keep 3 kernels? There were like 6 old kernels in those locations. I went and manually deleted the old ones and it freed up some space. I think this will be a lot easier than messing with all the partitions, if I can just make a setting change. Then my 22.5G size should be plenty big for what I need.
Yes, there is a setting. /etc/zypp/zypp.conf: multiversion.kernels = latest,latest-1,running That should normally mean 2 kernels. There is a service that applies this policy: systemctl status purge-kernels.service But to work it needs the kernel matching certain patterns. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 42.2 x86_64 "Malachite" at Telcontar)