andnekon

joined 1 year ago
[–] andnekon 11 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Stilltoomuchwasteofspace

[–] andnekon 2 points 9 months ago (3 children)

Very nice!

What do you mean by immutable though?

[–] andnekon 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I doubt it's useful for performance evaluation, however, if you are writing a paper and want to compare your algorithm to an existing one, this can be handy

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I want to thank everyone for the help!

I was finally able to find the issue. Thanks to @[email protected] 's question regarding my filesystem type, I decided to look into it.

I use btrfs, and this command showed me, that I have a lot of snapshots made by apt.

$ sudo btrfs subvolume list -s /         
...
ID 318 gen 2617038 cgen 2566262 top level 5 otime 2024-02-13 06:59:10 path @apt-snapshot-release-upgrade-jammy-2024-02-13_06:59:10

It was probably possible to determine how much space each of them was occupying, but I decided to simply delete them all and be done with the issue. So I installed apt-btrfs-snapshot and run delete-older-than 0d.

As a result, I now have 29 Gb and no backups, which is fine with me.

This answer on askubuntu was useful

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago

I'm using btrfs When I grew the partition, I only used GParted

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago (2 children)

I zeroed all the files in /var/log, but it had practically no effect on the disk usage

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago (4 children)

lsof -a +L1 / lsof -a +L1 /home

No, the output of these commands is empty. U also tried running with +L, in both cases most of the files were ~100Kb, largest was telegram in /opt with 150Mb.

Is it safe to remove /var/log? I almost never read logs anyway

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (6 children)

I run dual boot windows/ubuntu, nvme0n1p1 is efi system partition, p2-p5 are windows-reserved, and p6 is linux-swap.

Also, I didn't mention it in the post, but I recently grew linux partition up for around 16GB. I rebooted into windows several times after that, and everything was fine before the update.

/ and /home is just how I set it up.

/var seems to take up only 1.2 GB. I don't know, how can I check for any 'cruft'

spoiler

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago

Running sudo apt-get autoclean && sudo apt-get autoremove was the first thing I tried.

I am not sure, how do I interpret output of apt-cache stats?

spoiler

Total package names: 126893 (3,553 k)
Total package structures: 122145 (5,374 k)
  Normal packages: 81989
  Pure virtual packages: 2797
  Single virtual packages: 22954
  Mixed virtual packages: 2708
  Missing: 11697
Total distinct versions: 101553 (8,937 k)
Total distinct descriptions: 180829 (4,340 k)
Total dependencies: 609988/159599 (14.8 M)
Total ver/file relations: 32564 (782 k)
Total Desc/File relations: 49757 (1,194 k)
Total Provides mappings: 50727 (1,217 k)
Total globbed strings: 239740 (5,895 k)
Total slack space: 65.4 k
Total space accounted for: 47.7 M
Total buckets in PkgHashTable: 196613
  Unused: 109956
  Used: 86657
  Utilization: 44.0749%
  Average entries: 1.40952
  Longest: 17
  Shortest: 1
Total buckets in GrpHashTable: 196613
  Unused: 103120
  Used: 93493
  Utilization: 47.5518%
  Average entries: 1.35725
  Longest: 8
  Shortest: 1

[–] andnekon 1 points 9 months ago

I've already tried rebooting (as mentioned in the post, I've run GParted 'check' from liveUSB, reboot after. Also, I've done it seperately). And ncdu shows basically the same result as baobab — it doesn't add up to 93% disk usage from df

[–] andnekon 2 points 9 months ago

Thank you!

It worked without any problem.

[–] andnekon 5 points 10 months ago

50/50 would be for isOdd with the same implementation

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