After installing pacman packages (last one was ‘ungoogled-chromium’) my root partition of 20GB is completly full. Now I can’t update new packages.

My partition structure is: root (20GB) /home (470GB) swap (10GB)

How can I delete the garbage that is piling up in my root, and how to prevent it from happening again.

  • @Tw1@lemmy.roembol.nlOP
    link
    fedilink
    51 year ago

    log files only took up 800MB, but I fixed most of the problems now, by setting up pacman to put the cache in the home partition.

    You are right, it was better to leave /home in the same partition, but now it is difficult to chance that. I thought it had advantages when something goes wrong with my root i can swap it out, but it only caused problems for me. Why do so many people split up there /home then? I thought it was common practice.

    • @it_a_me@literature.cafe
      link
      fedilink
      5
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      The main advantage of having a /home partition is that you can easily preserve it during reinstalls or during a distro hop. Reinstalls used to be more common in the past when some distros didn’t allow full distro upgrades without reinstalling. See this result which is still ranked #1 on duckduckgo

      I personally use a @home btrfs subvolume which has most of the same advantages to me, and additionally allows @home and @root to share the same partition. It also allows me to use luks on everthing without bothering with lvm.

    • VegaLyrae
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      Yes, typically with two entirely separate disks, not just partitions on the same physical disk.