unlimitedloha.blogg.se

Debian clean disk
Debian clean disk













  1. DEBIAN CLEAN DISK HOW TO
  2. DEBIAN CLEAN DISK INSTALL
  3. DEBIAN CLEAN DISK SOFTWARE
  4. DEBIAN CLEAN DISK PC

DEBIAN CLEAN DISK INSTALL

Tl dr: Clean UEFI Debian install fails, help please. It looks it is by default on Debian, because libgtk or something depends on apparmor and then it is automatically enabled. Bug 917648 Hi, I didnt even know I had apparmor installed and enabled. I do not understand why a clean Debian install would fail. Subject: Re: Pkg-clamav-devel Bug917648: clamav-freshclam: doesnt properly clean up temporary files, consumes all disk.

DEBIAN CLEAN DISK HOW TO

I am not exactly sure on how to proceed and any help would be welcome. You may need to wipe you hard drive to clean up partition errors, bad installations, or for privacy. I tried using bash through the live USB and updating grub, the command succeeded, but nothing changed result wise. Going into the BIOS I can see both boot managers detected, the debian one and the Windows (even though the HD was formatted.)

DEBIAN CLEAN DISK PC

I used the same usb and chose reccomended settings for the disk partitions, which were done as following:ĭebian was installed without issues, but as soon as the PC restarted I was hit with the message No bootable device found. Next PC, I went for a clean install, wiping up the HD. It was a UEFI install and it never asked me where to install the bootloader, nonetheless it worked flawlessly, the PC boots into Grub as expected. I opened some disk space through windows and installed the Debian through a live USB. The first one was had windows 8.1, which was upgraded to 10. For other languages you'll need to replace /disabled/ in the command with its translation to your language.I just got my hand on a couple of Optiplex Desktops from Dell, so I went in installing Debian on both machines. Update: It looks like this script only works with English. In my case, the script reduced the size of the /var/lib/snapd/snaps/ folder by more than 50%. Using this script should free up some significant disk space (depending on the number of snap packages installed on your system, and if they had updates since they were installed). Snap remove "$snapname" -revision="$revision" overwrite a whole disk with a single file) but is very fast Dm-crypt/Drive preparationdm-crypt specific methods which uses dm-crypt.

debian clean disk

LANG=en_US.UTF-8 snap list -all | awk '/disabled/' | Securely wipe disk/Tips and tricksdd - advanced example which uses OpenSSL, Securely wipe disk/Tips and tricksUsing a template file which wipes with non-random preset data (e.g. Related, but for Flatpak packages: How To Remove Unused Flatpak Runtimes To Free Up Disk Spaceīut what if you want to remove all versions kept on the system for all snap packages that had updates? This is a script created by Popey, Community Manager in Ubuntu Engineering at Canonical, to remove ALL old versions of snaps, only keeping the current active version (updated with LANG=en_US.UTF-8 so it works with non-English locales, thanks to William in the comments):

debian clean disk

You can change this from the default value of 3 to 2 by using:

DEBIAN CLEAN DISK SOFTWARE

There is a snap option (starting with snapd version 2.34), called refresh.retain, to set the maximum number of a snap's revisions stored by the system after the next refresh, which can be set to a number between 2 and 20. First, download the BleachBit software and then run it as an administrator through the following command, because this way you will be able to remove the unwanted apt packages and some more system data along with the usual temporary files. Meaning that for each installed snap package that had at least 2 updates, I had 3 revisions stored on my system, taking up quite a bit of disk space. While investigating how I could free up some space / clear the snap cache from the /var/lib/snapd/snaps/ folder without removing the snap packages I had installed, I found out that by default, 3 snap versions are stored by the system after snap package updates. I was using Disk Usage Analyzer recently to see if I could free up some space on my Ubuntu 18.10 desktop, when I noticed that the /var/lib/snapd/snaps/ folder was quite large.















Debian clean disk