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is this rigth?
should /dev/sda3 be larger.
df -h
Sist. Arq. Tam Usad Disp Uso% Montado em
/dev/sda3 7,3G 6,1G 839M 89% /
none 505M 0 505M 0% /dev/shm
/dev/sda1 38M 9,5M 27M 27% /boot
/dev/sda4 84G 40G 41G 50% /home
if so i tried making it a bit larger with gparted but couldnt manage to unmount it.
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I think it is a bit tight. I would give it 15G to be on the safe side. You already have 90% of the partition used as it is; so give it a bit more room.
R.
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to resize / you will have to either use a gparted live cd or boot into another OS, you can't unmount / from within the OS ;p
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To resize use system rescue cd the best tool I have found. Just start gparted from the cd and voila. But, hey, you got a lot of stuff in / my / is just 10GB and is only using 3GB with a full blown gnome desktop office suite and games.
Last edited by kensai (2007-12-25 04:07:36)
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Have you ever cleaned the pacman cache (pacman -Sc)? That may free up a lot.
Last edited by Allan (2007-12-25 05:38:02)
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I think the size should be OK, I use generally 8GB for my root partition with a separate /home partition and a data partition.
Once you've your system set up the needed space in the root partition will not grow a lot, so this size should be OK.
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7gb is fine, I typically use 5gb myself. Just make sure you clear out your pacman cache frequently, using "pacman -Sc"
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LVM2 saves me of troubles
[dante4d ~]$ df
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/vg0-root 8.0G 4.3G 3.8G 54% /
none 506M 0 506M 0% /dev/shm
/dev/mapper/vg0-home 30G 13G 18G 44% /home
/dev/sda1 92M 11M 76M 13% /boot
If I ever run out of space I'll just do 'lvm lvextend -L +1G /dev/vg0/root' followed by 'resize_reiserfs -s +1G /dev/vg0/root' (I'm not sure if it's correct syntax now ).
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to resize / you will have to either use a gparted live cd or boot into another OS, you can't unmount / from within the OS ;p
i used an ubuntu live cd to use gparted.
will i loose data if i redimension my sda4 (/home). because it seems complicated to do. how to change the size of / without messing with /home?
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