Run Out Of Space On /dev/sda2

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1















My Linux (Mint 13) laptop reported that 'The volume "Fiilesystem root" has only 0 bytes disk space remaining'. When I ran a 'df' I got the following result:-



HP-255-G1-Notebook-PC # df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 28836860 27372200 0 100% /
udev 1810632 4 1810628 1% /dev
tmpfs 727768 980 726788 1% /run
none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock
none 1819416 76 1819340 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda3 692800400 68383328 589741516 11% /home
overflow 1024 16 1008 2% /tmp


I suspect that the system was originally configured with insufficient space on /dev/sda2. Is it possible to reconfigure this without doing a complete reinstall?



Thank you.










share|improve this question






















  • You should have a look at gparted.

    – Thushi
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:16











  • Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

    – OmiPenguin
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:35











  • You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

    – PM 2Ring
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:15












  • are /home and / using LVM?

    – guido
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:58















1















My Linux (Mint 13) laptop reported that 'The volume "Fiilesystem root" has only 0 bytes disk space remaining'. When I ran a 'df' I got the following result:-



HP-255-G1-Notebook-PC # df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 28836860 27372200 0 100% /
udev 1810632 4 1810628 1% /dev
tmpfs 727768 980 726788 1% /run
none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock
none 1819416 76 1819340 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda3 692800400 68383328 589741516 11% /home
overflow 1024 16 1008 2% /tmp


I suspect that the system was originally configured with insufficient space on /dev/sda2. Is it possible to reconfigure this without doing a complete reinstall?



Thank you.










share|improve this question






















  • You should have a look at gparted.

    – Thushi
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:16











  • Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

    – OmiPenguin
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:35











  • You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

    – PM 2Ring
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:15












  • are /home and / using LVM?

    – guido
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:58













1












1








1








My Linux (Mint 13) laptop reported that 'The volume "Fiilesystem root" has only 0 bytes disk space remaining'. When I ran a 'df' I got the following result:-



HP-255-G1-Notebook-PC # df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 28836860 27372200 0 100% /
udev 1810632 4 1810628 1% /dev
tmpfs 727768 980 726788 1% /run
none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock
none 1819416 76 1819340 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda3 692800400 68383328 589741516 11% /home
overflow 1024 16 1008 2% /tmp


I suspect that the system was originally configured with insufficient space on /dev/sda2. Is it possible to reconfigure this without doing a complete reinstall?



Thank you.










share|improve this question














My Linux (Mint 13) laptop reported that 'The volume "Fiilesystem root" has only 0 bytes disk space remaining'. When I ran a 'df' I got the following result:-



HP-255-G1-Notebook-PC # df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 28836860 27372200 0 100% /
udev 1810632 4 1810628 1% /dev
tmpfs 727768 980 726788 1% /run
none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock
none 1819416 76 1819340 1% /run/shm
/dev/sda3 692800400 68383328 589741516 11% /home
overflow 1024 16 1008 2% /tmp


I suspect that the system was originally configured with insufficient space on /dev/sda2. Is it possible to reconfigure this without doing a complete reinstall?



Thank you.







linux linux-mint devices






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asked Feb 9 '15 at 13:10









MichaelJohnMichaelJohn

1781215




1781215












  • You should have a look at gparted.

    – Thushi
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:16











  • Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

    – OmiPenguin
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:35











  • You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

    – PM 2Ring
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:15












  • are /home and / using LVM?

    – guido
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:58

















  • You should have a look at gparted.

    – Thushi
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:16











  • Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

    – OmiPenguin
    Feb 9 '15 at 13:35











  • You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

    – PM 2Ring
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:15












  • are /home and / using LVM?

    – guido
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:58
















You should have a look at gparted.

– Thushi
Feb 9 '15 at 13:16





You should have a look at gparted.

– Thushi
Feb 9 '15 at 13:16













Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

– OmiPenguin
Feb 9 '15 at 13:35





Here you go it might be helpful "thewiringcloset.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/…"

– OmiPenguin
Feb 9 '15 at 13:35













You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

– PM 2Ring
Feb 9 '15 at 14:15






You might have some huge files that are taking up space on your root partition that don't need to be there. This question has some suggestions for finding them. Also, it might be worthwhile running bleachbit.

– PM 2Ring
Feb 9 '15 at 14:15














are /home and / using LVM?

– guido
Feb 9 '15 at 14:58





are /home and / using LVM?

– guido
Feb 9 '15 at 14:58










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Yes it is possible to change partitioning under any of GNU/Linux OS with gparted without reintstalling the OS. You will need to download from gpated
web site Live CD/USB image, make a bootable media with it and load machine from there. If you have enough free space before or after the partition you can easily resize it in particular enlarge. Save any precious data before.



Hope it helps.






share|improve this answer























  • Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

    – Bratchley
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:48











  • If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

    – Ruslan Gerasimov
    Feb 9 '15 at 15:52











  • There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

    – Ray Andrews
    Feb 10 '15 at 0:42










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Yes it is possible to change partitioning under any of GNU/Linux OS with gparted without reintstalling the OS. You will need to download from gpated
web site Live CD/USB image, make a bootable media with it and load machine from there. If you have enough free space before or after the partition you can easily resize it in particular enlarge. Save any precious data before.



Hope it helps.






share|improve this answer























  • Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

    – Bratchley
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:48











  • If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

    – Ruslan Gerasimov
    Feb 9 '15 at 15:52











  • There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

    – Ray Andrews
    Feb 10 '15 at 0:42















0














Yes it is possible to change partitioning under any of GNU/Linux OS with gparted without reintstalling the OS. You will need to download from gpated
web site Live CD/USB image, make a bootable media with it and load machine from there. If you have enough free space before or after the partition you can easily resize it in particular enlarge. Save any precious data before.



Hope it helps.






share|improve this answer























  • Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

    – Bratchley
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:48











  • If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

    – Ruslan Gerasimov
    Feb 9 '15 at 15:52











  • There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

    – Ray Andrews
    Feb 10 '15 at 0:42













0












0








0







Yes it is possible to change partitioning under any of GNU/Linux OS with gparted without reintstalling the OS. You will need to download from gpated
web site Live CD/USB image, make a bootable media with it and load machine from there. If you have enough free space before or after the partition you can easily resize it in particular enlarge. Save any precious data before.



Hope it helps.






share|improve this answer













Yes it is possible to change partitioning under any of GNU/Linux OS with gparted without reintstalling the OS. You will need to download from gpated
web site Live CD/USB image, make a bootable media with it and load machine from there. If you have enough free space before or after the partition you can easily resize it in particular enlarge. Save any precious data before.



Hope it helps.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 9 '15 at 14:17









Ruslan GerasimovRuslan Gerasimov

54338




54338












  • Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

    – Bratchley
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:48











  • If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

    – Ruslan Gerasimov
    Feb 9 '15 at 15:52











  • There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

    – Ray Andrews
    Feb 10 '15 at 0:42

















  • Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

    – Bratchley
    Feb 9 '15 at 14:48











  • If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

    – Ruslan Gerasimov
    Feb 9 '15 at 15:52











  • There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

    – Ray Andrews
    Feb 10 '15 at 0:42
















Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

– Bratchley
Feb 9 '15 at 14:48





Will gparted migrate their data? I ask because I doubt that the installer left much (if any) space between /dev/sda2 and /dev/sda3.

– Bratchley
Feb 9 '15 at 14:48













If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

– Ruslan Gerasimov
Feb 9 '15 at 15:52





If it is possible to move the whole /dev/sda3 then it goes

– Ruslan Gerasimov
Feb 9 '15 at 15:52













There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

– Ray Andrews
Feb 10 '15 at 0:42





There are several ways you could proceed, but first we need to look at your partitioning of the disk, what does "cfdisk /dev/sda" report?

– Ray Andrews
Feb 10 '15 at 0:42

















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