[gentoo-user] /usr is full

2006-01-29 Thread Jason W Elliot
Hi, While trying to run emerge today I got the message that there was not enough disk space. I ran df and noticed that /usr is 100% full. I am wonderring whether there is an easy way to clean it up. I'd rather not resize my partitions, and it's likely that there's a lot of junk in there

Re: [gentoo-user] /usr is full

2006-01-29 Thread Jason W Elliot
The only problem with this approach is that I don't have enough space to download http-replicator. I'll try this as soon as I get things somewhat cleaned-up. Thanks for the advice! -Jason On Sun, 29 Jan 2006, Dale wrote: Jason W Elliot wrote: Hi, While trying to run emerge today I

Re: [gentoo-user] /usr is full

2006-01-29 Thread Jason W Elliot
Thanks! This looks like exactly what I need. I'm running it right now. -Jason On Sun, 29 Jan 2006, Philip Webb wrote: 060129 Jason W Elliot wrote: While trying to run emerge today I got the message that there was not enough disk space. I ran df and noticed that /usr is 100% full

Re: [gentoo-user] /usr is full

2006-01-29 Thread Jason W Elliot
Thanks! I'm looking into both of these. -Jason On Mon, 30 Jan 2006, Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: On Monday 30 January 2006 00:15, Jason W Elliot wrote: that I don't need. Is it safe to remove the stuff in /usr/portage/distfiles? yes. you may also have a look into localepurge. Oh

[gentoo-user] sacked my rc.conf

2005-09-01 Thread Jason W Elliot
I accidentally removed my rc.conf file (don't ask). I'm not sure how to write a new one. Is there a good set of defaults to start with? Is there an easy way to recover the old one, or generate a new one? Please help! My configuration now sucks! Thanks in advance! --

Re: [gentoo-user] sacked my rc.conf

2005-09-01 Thread Jason W Elliot
and a few other nice apps XSESSION=Gnome bunyip ~ # On Thu, 2005-09-01 at 00:16 -0600, Jason W Elliot wrote: I accidentally removed my rc.conf file (don't ask). I'm not sure how to write a new one. Is there a good set of defaults to start with? Is there an easy way to recover the old one