Dave Sherohman wrote: > While that is accurate as far as it goes... How likely is the average > user to ever need the cached debs?
[ snippage ] > Realistically, if you're not going to install to additional machines and > it's been more than a day or two since you installed a package (to > provide time to notice any install/configuration problems), the odds of > needing the deb again are pretty much nil. Using "clean" instead of > "autoclean" will be fine in the large majority of cases. Y'know, I had a long reply here basically arguing one against the other, one being safer than the other. Then I decided to test the theory on my own machines since I had not done autoclean/clean in a while... [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~} du -sh /var/cache/apt/archives 732M /var/cache/apt/archives [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# aptitude autoclean Freed 0B of disk space [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# du -sh /var/cache/apt/archives 740M /var/cache/apt/archives [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# aptitude autoclean Freed 0B of disk space [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~} du -sh /var/cache/apt/archives [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# aptitude autoclean Freed 0B of disk space [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# Apparently cron.daily/apt is firing off autoclean by default as it is because I haven't done it in quite a few days. Which means offering autoclean as a first step is kinda pointless and nets nothing. Go fig. Carry on. -- Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream? PGP Key: 1FC01004 | And dream I do... -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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