On 10/15/19 7:13 PM, home user wrote:
(replying to Samuel)
> What I would recommend...
Well, I simply did "su -", and then "baobab". Unfortunately, I can't
directly put that into a post in this list, and fpaste doesn't take
images (screen captures). So I manually typed up the data in a text
On 10/16/19 11:58 AM, Tim via users wrote:
On Wed, 2019-10-16 at 07:50 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
You can delete them all, especially the log files.
Didn't we used to have log rotate daemon to manage that kind of thing
for us?
Oh, follow-up.
If one wants to file a RFE bugzilla to rpmfus
On 10/16/19 11:58 AM, Tim via users wrote:
On Wed, 2019-10-16 at 07:50 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
You can delete them all, especially the log files.
Didn't we used to have log rotate daemon to manage that kind of thing
for us?
Well, yes. One could add a file in /etc/logrotate.d with the nec
On Wed, 2019-10-16 at 07:50 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> You can delete them all, especially the log files.
Didn't we used to have log rotate daemon to manage that kind of thing
for us?
--
uname -rsvp
Linux 3.10.0-1062.1.2.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Sep 30 14:19:46 UTC 2019 x86_64
Boilerplate: A
On 10/16/19 10:13 AM, home user wrote:
Well, I simply did "su -", and then "baobab". Unfortunately, I can't directly put that
into a post in this list, and fpaste doesn't take images (screen captures). So I manually typed up the data
in a text file. I added output from "du -h | sort -hr | he
(replying to Samuel)
> What I would recommend...
Well, I simply did "su -", and then "baobab". Unfortunately, I can't
directly put that into a post in this list, and fpaste doesn't take
images (screen captures). So I manually typed up the data in a text
file. I added output from "du -h | sor
On 10/15/19 3:45 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
I would recommend is just using the Gnome disk analyzer
Hi Samuel,
I just tried it out. It has a petty interface.
I have been using xdiskusage, which has a miserable interface, but it
works over "ssh -X".
# dnf install baobab
How they get baobab ou
On 10/16/19 8:38 AM, home user wrote:
(responding to Ed)
> Actually, none. ... You can delete them all, especially the log files. ...
Thank-you, Ed.
Done. I'll put new statistics in a response to Samuel.
How can this be automated such that each week, when I do my patches (dnf
upgrade), those
(responding to Ed)
> Actually, none. ... You can delete them all, especially the log
files. ...
Thank-you, Ed.
Done. I'll put new statistics in a response to Samuel.
How can this be automated such that each week, when I do my patches (dnf
upgrade), those files are automatically deleted if th
On 10/15/19 18:51, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 10/15/19 1:00 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
and that turns out to be the weak link. We live in a rural area and
our power is reliable but I do get occasional monetary drops the make
the UPS
s beep and apparently that is causing the Ethernet adapters to become
On 10/16/19 7:25 AM, home user wrote:
(picking up from Ed's suggestion in the old thread)
> For example, if you use the akmod package for nVidia drivers
> they are automatically rebuilt on each new kernel. But the
> directory where the rpm's are kept (/var/cache/akmods/nvidia)
> isn't clean up a
On Tue, 15 Oct 2019 at 17:01, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 10/05/19 13:56, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> >> I see a TP-Link AC1750 Smart WiFi Router - Dual Band Gigabit Wireless
> >> router available at an attractive price. Information is a bit vague.
> >> Have you tried that model? I have been looking for ass
On 10/15/2019 04:53 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 10/15/19 3:43 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 10/15/2019 03:05 PM, sixpack13 wrote:
installed by default and is under gnome programs => Utilities =>
"Disk Usage Analyse"
Is it still installed by default if I'm running Xfce?
Unlikely, the package name i
(picking up from Ed's suggestion in the old thread)
> For example, if you use the akmod package for nVidia drivers
> they are automatically rebuilt on each new kernel. But the
> directory where the rpm's are kept (/var/cache/akmods/nvidia)
> isn't clean up and will grow with time.
Ed appears to
(responding to sixpack13, two posts)
> baobab
> installed...
> s/Disk Usage Analyse/Disk Usage Analyzer/
> https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baobab_(Software)
ok, thank-you.
(responding to John)
> Konqueror has ...
ok, thank-you.
Let's continue this in the new thread.
thanks,
Bill.
_
On 10/15/19 3:55 PM, home user wrote:
Thank-you. I did not know about these. I was using the man pages on my
workstation. Is there a local man page for system-upgrade plugin? I'm
not finding one.
man dnf.plugin.system-upgrade
Assuming your mandb is up-to-date, you can do things like "man
On 10/15/19 3:43 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 10/15/2019 03:05 PM, sixpack13 wrote:
installed by default and is under gnome programs => Utilities => "Disk
Usage Analyse"
Is it still installed by default if I'm running Xfce?
Unlikely, the package name is "baobab".
On 10/15/19 1:12 PM, Jack Craig wrote:
maybe a UPS system might fix the problem?
Unless you're referring to a whole-house UPS system, that won't work.
These devices definitely won't work through a UPS.
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(responding to sixpack13)
> And who is the "sys.admin" and does the "sys.admin"-tasks on your box ?
This is workstation in my home; I am it's sole user; it's my only
workstation; it's what I use for communication, personal financial
business, some entertainment, and other things. No games. I h
On 10/15/19 1:00 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
and that turns out to be the weak link. We live in a rural area and our
power is reliable but I do get occasional monetary drops the make the UPS
s beep and apparently that is causing the Ethernet adapters to become
unpaired. This morning I reset them and
On 10/15/19 3:13 PM, home user wrote:
-bash.14[/]: du -hx -d1 /
23G /var
4.0K /system-upgrade-root
4.0K /srv
17G /usr
16K /lost+found
51M /etc
4.0K /sysroot
4.0K /mnt
1.4G /root
4.0K /media
238M /opt
4.0K /.cache
41G /
starting questions
==
On 10/15/2019 03:05 PM, sixpack13 wrote:
installed by default and is under gnome programs => Utilities => "Disk Usage
Analyse"
Is it still installed by default if I'm running Xfce?
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(responding to Ed)
> Yes
Thank-you. Done.
> rm /var/lib/dnf/system-upgrade deletes the link.
Done. Thank-you.
> FWIW, as noted by Samuel, removing packages won't buy you much.
I was taught to get the advice of 2 or 3 wise friends where practical;
it's in the Bible somewhere (I wish I could rem
On 15/10/2019 21:34, Ed Greshko wrote:
You may wish to show how much space you have on / and how much is used.
Then go about finding what
areas take up the majority of space. There may be a GUI tool for that
but I can't think of it at 4AM.
I can only think of "du -s *" used at various points
(Fedora-30; x86-64; personal workstation)
This problem goes back to last Thursday, so a brief review might be good.
brief background
Last Thursday, I tried to upgrade from Fedora-29 to Fedora-30. dnf
complained it didn't have enough space in the '/' filesystem. List
members s
s/Disk Usage Analyse/Disk Usage Analyzer/
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baobab_(Software)
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...
> There may be a GUI tool for that but I can't
> think of it at 4AM.
baobab
installed by default and is under gnome programs => Utilities => "Disk Usage
Analyse"
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...
> To remove cached metadata and transaction use 'dnf system-upgrade clean'
> The downloaded packages were saved in cache until the next successful
> transaction.
> You can remove cached packages by executing 'dnf clean packages'.
> -
> My sense is that those two dnf commands are things the
On 10/16/19 4:14 AM, home user wrote:
question 1: Can I delete "/home/sysyem-upgrade"? I'm fully done with it,
right? (yes, I know it's only a few bytes)
Yes
question 2: How do I unlink (decouple) "/var/lib/dnf/system-upgrade" and "/home/system-upgrade". I looked at the "ln" man page, and
On 10/15/19 16:12, Jack Craig wrote:
maybe a UPS system might fix the problem?
.
Well if it does it would seriously reduce the utility of those adapters,
I hope not. I already use three UPS's, it might mean another here and a
fourth one downstairs where we are still trying to find an acceptab
(responding to Samuel)
> The first one is specific to the system-upgrade plugin ...
ok, nothing for me to do there.
> The second one is just the standard bit...
ok, nothing for me to do there.
(continuing on my previous post)
> Let's deal with this one first, then I'll post the second.
The secon
maybe a UPS system might fix the problem?
On Tue, Oct 15, 2019 at 1:01 PM Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 10/05/19 13:56, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> >> I see a TP-Link AC1750 Smart WiFi Router - Dual Band Gigabit Wireless
> >> router available at an attractive price. Information is a bit vague.
> >> Have you
On 10/05/19 13:56, Samuel Sieb wrote:
I see a TP-Link AC1750 Smart WiFi Router - Dual Band Gigabit Wireless
router available at an attractive price. Information is a bit vague.
Have you tried that model? I have been looking for assurance that it
could be used as an Access point as it comes. I c
On 10/15/19 10:44 AM, home user wrote:
(responding to Samuel)
> This is a 3rd-party application that you installed manually.
sigh. How did I miss that? (don't answer!) You're correct. It's for
zoom meetings. On a few issues that I bring to this list, I wish I
could do a zoom meeting to de
(responding to Ed)
> Yes, research is required. Especially in the event one may be using
some of them.
> I would not willy-nilly erase all of them.
Last Thursday, I came "that close" to running that
"dnf remove $(dnf repoquery --extras --exclude=kernel,kernel-\*)".
Looks like it's a good thing
Hello,
it is possible to use an IPA accounts to login to the AD domain
(cross-forest trust)? I would need create a file share on Windows, which
should be accessible by IPA users. I know the opposite (AD --> IPA) work
well, but after i read all docs, I came to conclusion that this so
called "t
> (responding to sixpack13)
> -bash.9[~]: uname -a
> Linux coyote 5.2.18-200.fc30.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Oct 1 13:14:07 UTC 2019
...
> The grub menu has the following choices:
> Fedora-30
> Fedora-29 (from Oct. 10?)
> Fedora-29 (from Oct, 03?)
> Fedora-30 rescue
> Windows-7
>
remove elder kernels an
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