> On 2017/11/02 20:26, Jay Hart wrote: >> > On 2017-10-30, Jay Hart <jh...@kevla.org> wrote: >> >> Good Evening Fellow OpenBSDers, >> >> >> >> Below is currently how I have my disk laid out partition wise. I have a >> >> feeling I need to >> swap >> >> /tmp and /usr in order to gain additional space for /usr. >> > >> >> /dev/wd0f 2.0G 1.7G 153M 92% /usr >> > >> > That seems way too much for /usr. sysclean (in packages) will probably help >> > you identify some old files to remove. >> > >> > >> >> Stuart, >> >> A ton of files were identified, assume based on your reply I can just remove >> them with no >> issues? > > Things that sysclean finds under /usr are generally ok, if you've done > a few OS updates you will have a bunch of old gcc-related files, perl > binare modules from past versions, dead manual pages, etc. > > I would suggest loading into an editor, sorting, reviewing the list. > sysclean is aware of known ports files but there are some things like > optional config files that it can't know about, so watch out for those > (but usually not in /etc). If you're not confident you can tar them up > rather than removing outright. > >
Stuart, Thanks for telling me about sysclean, I was not aware of this utility before. I've run sysclean and removed over 280 files/directories. and have improved free space quite a bit, but still seem to think I've an issue with /usr. Right now I have a clean 6.2 base system, but still have the source code tree installed for 6.1. Usually I just wipe /usr/src and /usr/obj, but I'm thinking I need to find a better way to manage /usr space. Can you instruct me a bit on what I should do with /usr (and all subdirectories) upon upgrading from one version to another. Here is my free space according to df after running sysclean and cleaning up those files/directories: Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /dev/wd0a 1005M 63.4M 891M 7% / /dev/wd0k 22.7G 321M 21.3G 1% /home /dev/wd0d 3.9G 12.0K 3.7G 0% /tmp /dev/wd0f 2.0G 1.6G 274M 86% /usr /dev/wd0g 1005M 183M 771M 19% /usr/X11R6 /dev/wd0h 6.8G 27.1M 6.4G 0% /usr/local /dev/wd0j 3.9G 293M 3.5G 8% /usr/obj /dev/wd0i 3.9G 852M 2.9G 22% /usr/src /dev/wd0e 6.3G 28.1M 6.0G 0% /var TIA, Jay