Quoting Cindy-Sue Causey (butterflyby...@gmail.com):
> On 9/7/15, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> > David Wright a écrit :
> >>
> >>>From man apt-cache:
> >>
> >>-p, --pkg-cache
> >>Select the file to store the package cache. The package
> >>cache is the primary cache used
Quoting Pascal Hambourg (pas...@plouf.fr.eu.org):
> David Wright a écrit :
> > Quoting David Baron (d_ba...@012.net.il):
> >
> > Pascal, I believe, said:
> >>> You can bind|link|whatever /var/cache/apt/archive to a filesystem with
> >>> enough free space.
> >> Running it this way right now, seems
On 9/7/15, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> David Wright a écrit :
>>
>>>From man apt-cache:
>>
>>-p, --pkg-cache
>>Select the file to store the package cache. The package
>>cache is the primary cache used by all operations.
>>Configuration Item: Dir::Cache::pkg
David Wright a écrit :
> Quoting David Baron (d_ba...@012.net.il):
>
> Pascal, I believe, said:
>>> You can bind|link|whatever /var/cache/apt/archive to a filesystem with
>>> enough free space.
>> Running it this way right now, seems OK. Question: Is this directory needed
>> at
>> boot, i.e., be
Quoting David Baron (d_ba...@012.net.il):
Pascal, I believe, said:
> > You can bind|link|whatever /var/cache/apt/archive to a filesystem with
> > enough free space.
>
> Running it this way right now, seems OK. Question: Is this directory needed
> at
> boot, i.e., before home is mounted (why I d
dean a écrit :
>
> On 07/09/15 17:42, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
>> Because you selected LVM in the assisted mode, which messes up sizes and
>> does not leave any free extents for future growth. You can still reduce
>> an oversized LV to free some extents but if the filesystem is ext2/3/4
>> it cann
On 07/09/15 17:42, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> David Baron a écrit :
>>> David Baron a écrit :
Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
>>>
>>> Too bad you did trust the Debian installer i
David Baron a écrit :
>> David Baron a écrit :
>>> Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
>>> there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
>>
>> Too bad you did trust the Debian installer instead of using LVM and
>> leaving some space avail
> David Baron a écrit :
> > Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start upgrading.
> > Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
> > there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
>
> Too bad you did trust the Debian installer
David Baron a écrit :
> Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start upgrading.
> Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
> there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
Too bad you did trust the Debian installer instead o
On Sunday 06 September 2015 20:45:02 Joe wrote:
> On Sun, 06 Sep 2015 21:54:13 +0300
>
> David Baron wrote:
> > On Sunday 06 September 2015 09:32:08 David Christensen wrote:
> > > On 09/06/2015 02:55 AM, David Baron wrote:
> > > > Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start
> >
On Sun, 06 Sep 2015 21:54:13 +0300
David Baron wrote:
> On Sunday 06 September 2015 09:32:08 David Christensen wrote:
> > On 09/06/2015 02:55 AM, David Baron wrote:
> > > Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start
> > > upgrading. Problem is that with that darned partitioning b
On Sunday 06 September 2015 09:32:08 David Christensen wrote:
> On 09/06/2015 02:55 AM, David Baron wrote:
> > Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start upgrading.
> > Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
> > there is not enough room on /var
On 09/06/2015 02:55 AM, David Baron wrote:
Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start upgrading.
Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user
Now that the g++ business is largely behind us, want to start upgrading.
Problem is that with that darned partitioning by the Debian installation,
there is not enough room on /var to accomplish upgrade of such size.
What can be done about this?
Note that to get an /opt, I bind this to a directo
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