Free Download Seas0npass Filesystem Patch Failed Programs

  вторник 18 декабря
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If you guys think of any more, please feel free to post them up and we'll add them! If you accidentally upgrade and then try to downgrade, your restore will fail. Fix Recovery Option in Tiny Umbrella as well as other jailbreak utilities. The file system in order to download Cydia and applications that are not.

During a recent update I received this: Installing: kernel-default-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 [error] Installation of kernel-default-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 failed: (with --nodeps --force) Error: Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: installing package kernel-default-2.6.37.6-0.11.1.x86_64 needs 147MB on the / filesystem Abort, retry, ignore?

[a/r/i] (a): i Installing: kernel-desktop-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 [error] Installation of kernel-desktop-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 failed: (with --nodeps --force) Error: Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: installing package kernel-desktop-2.6.37.6-0.11.1.x86_64 needs 148MB on the / filesystem Abort, retry, ignore? Manycam pro torrent. [a/r/i] (a): i Installing: kernel-source-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 [error] Installation of kernel-source-2.6.37.6-0.11.1 failed: (with --nodeps --force) Error: Subprocess failed. Error: RPM failed: installing package kernel-source-2.6.37.6-0.11.1.noarch needs 432MB on the / filesystem Which I am assuming means my / partition needs some room.

So I checked the size/space: Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda1 25G 24G 208M 100% / How did / grow to be so huge!? Is this a common occurrence and is there a quick trick to freeing up some space? I assume that there are things I'm not using in there and I've been able to update kernels easily for the past year -- so something is accumulating. I'd rather figure out what I free up (are old kernels kept?) instead of re-partitioning my whole drive to grow /.

Make a backup before making any of the following changes Do not proceed without either a backup or the willingness to lose all data. Run du -sh /home to get the size used by /home directory. If it's sufficiently large(>=4G), /home is a good candidate to have its own partition. Boot from either a livecd or Depending on your partition table type (GPT or MBR), use either gdisk, parted, or fdisk. Create a new partition Format using your preferred fstype e.g. Mkfs.ext4 /dev/sda2 mkdir /mnt/os mkdir /mnt/home mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/os # mount your OS, now all on / mount /dev/sda2 /mnt/home # mount newly formatted partion cp -a /mnt/os/home/* /mnt/home/ # copy current /home data to new partition cd /mnt/os/home # remove old home data, leaving mountpoint rm -rf.

Now you need to cd to /mnt/os/etc and edit fstab and add /dev/sda2 /home ext4 defaults 0 1 There's more than one way to do this. Depending on your experience and skill you could mount by UUID (preferred, but not necessary). One could do the same for other filesystems, if you've installed a lot of google tools, or eclipse, they get intalled in /opt and it is also a good candidate to be in its own partition. If you get to the point where you have many partitions, you'll want to switch to GPT partitioning and/or LVM.

If so, re-ask the question. Whether a 25GB system partition is huge or tiny depends on how much software you have installed (is this a single-purpose server or a shared workstation with a lot of domain-specific software?) and on how much data is lurking in /var (do you have 200 users' mail in that partition?). Good places to look for accumulated cruft include: • /tmp: any old, large files in there? You may want to make /tmp a tmpfs filesystem, so that it doesn't consume disk space and starts afresh at every boot. • /var/tmp: any huge files in there? • /var/log: did a runaway service produce gigabytes of logs?

• /var/cache: is there a large cache that isn't being purged properly? Especially check where your distribution puts downloaded packages (e.g. /var/cache/apt/archives/ on APT-based distributions). • Do you have any unused software installed? That's usually not much, but you may be able to find library versions that aren't used by any executable still on your system. Programs like deborphan (on Debian and derivatives) can help.

Check if you're encumbered by old kernels, too. If you can't find what to delete, you can at least see what's taking up space with du or a such as (a Gnome utility). If you have space left elsewhere, you can move some large chunk of /usr or /var (or /opt or /srv if relevant) to a different partition and make a symbolic link.