Tim,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo df -h
Password:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hdb1 15G 346M 14G 3% /
varrun 252M 104K 252M 1% /var/run
varlock 252M 4.0K 252M 1% /var/lock
procbususb 10M 116K 9.9M 2% /proc/bus/usb
udev 10M 116K 9.9M 2% /dev
devshm 252M 0 252M 0% /dev/shm
lrm 252M 18M 235M
7% /lib/modules/2.6.17-11-generic/volatile
/dev/hdb9 2.7G 1.6G 1.1G 60% /home
/dev/hda1 400M 337M 64M 85% /media/hda1
/dev/hda5 3.7G 1.5G 2.2G 41% /media/hda5
/dev/hdb6 941M 17M 875M 2% /opt
/dev/hdb8 192M 6.4M 175M 4% /tmp
/dev/hdb5 9.7G 1.8G 7.4G 20% /usr
/dev/hdb7 934M 182M 703M 21% /var
/dev/hdd 697M 697M 0 100% /media/cdrom0
2 HDD's, 1 small for NT and not used for Linux. The second has about
40G in all. I remember being confused about how much to allow for the
root (not boot) partition and (trying to) play it safe. I had the
original installation process put the loader on the second HDD and on
startup I tell Smart Boot Manager to boot from that HDD to get Ubuntu
started.
I think the answer to your question is no.
It seems there is plenty of space there on /root and you have no
separate /boot. I'm out of ideas. I just read of someone a few days
ago upgrading to 7.04 and running out of space in /boot.
I would check out the Ubuntu forums as Lyndon suggested.
--
Later
David Kirk