Ubuntu 14.04 LTS on a ASUS Laptop

1

I have an ASUS laptop which I am trying to re-purpose as a Linux machine, to which I purchased a new 750GB hard drive. Yesterday I installed Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and followed general guidelines for creating different drive partitions, actually allowing for slightly more space than suggested since the hard drive is pretty large.

I also encrypted my home directory during install (not sure if this is what is causing the problem I'm about to describe).

Tonight I'm trying to get a few programs setup on here that I use regularly such as Spotify and Dropbox. I was able to install both of these, however Dropbox seems to think I am out of diskspace (claims I only have 500MB left or some nonsense). I am confused as to why. It is located in my /home/mydirectory which I (believe) is setup with the largest partition, close to 700GB. Even if I wanted to sync everything I have in my DB, that is still only 30GB, so clearly I have plenty of space.

When I "examined disks" to see where the problem was, I noticed that a seemingly large portion of that disk is being used (reserved?) by my private (encrypted) directory. Is it possible to move DB to this directory? How do I place things in there in the first place?

I encrypted it for safety/security reasons originally, but now I am questioning if it was worth it. I wasn't given any options from DB when I installed it, but I know I can "move" the directory. Any help or suggestions are appreciated.

Edit 05-16-15

At your suggestion, I found out the following information:

user@Asus:~$ df -H
Filesystem               Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda9                 17G   15G  658M  96% /
none                     4.1k     0  4.1k   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
udev                     4.1G  4.1k  4.1G   1% /dev
tmpfs                    814M  1.3M  813M   1% /run
none                     5.3M     0  5.3M   0% /run/lock
none                     4.1G  6.6M  4.1G   1% /run/shm
none                     105M   41k  105M   1% /run/user
/home/user/.Private   17G   15G  658M  96% /home/greywolf
user@Asus:~$ 

Looking at this, I see why it thinks I am running out of space. However, this is still perplexing to me as I have a 700+GB volume that is not listed here at all. What is more odd is that prior to opening this message to edit, I saw it mounted (even pulled up the properties) - now it is gone. When I was trying to install on here, I thought I had saved the largest volume for /home. I have not gotten very far in this process that I couldn't just start over. If you had a 750GB hard drive to install Ubuntu on, what partitions would you create during the start up process and in what capacities? That may be what I need to try again. (I didn't have this problem the last time so not sure why I'm having it now)

gparted gave me the following:

user@Asus:~$ sudo gparted
======================
libparted : 2.3
======================

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 7 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 6 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 26 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 25 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 33 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 32 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 36 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 35 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 39 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 38 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 42 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 41 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 45 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 44 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 48 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 47 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 51 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 50 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 54 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 53 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 57 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 56 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 60 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 59 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 65 was not found when attempting to remove it

(gpartedbin:4874): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 64 was not found when attempting to remove it

It appears to still be running. It also brought up the gparted gui, which I took a screen shot of but I am uncertain how to post that in here.

Results from Mount:

user@Asus:~$ mount
/dev/sda9 on / type ext4 (rw,errors=remount-ro)
proc on /proc type proc (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev)
sysfs on /sys type sysfs (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev)
none on /sys/fs/cgroup type tmpfs (rw)
none on /sys/fs/fuse/connections type fusectl (rw)
none on /sys/kernel/debug type debugfs (rw)
none on /sys/kernel/security type securityfs (rw)
udev on /dev type devtmpfs (rw,mode=0755)
devpts on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,noexec,nosuid,gid=5,mode=0620)
tmpfs on /run type tmpfs (rw,noexec,nosuid,size=10%,mode=0755)
none on /run/lock type tmpfs (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev,size=5242880)
none on /run/shm type tmpfs (rw,nosuid,nodev)
none on /run/user type tmpfs (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev,size=104857600,mode=0755)
none on /sys/fs/pstore type pstore (rw)
systemd on /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd type cgroup (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev,none,name=systemd)
/home/user/.Private on /home/user type ecryptfs (ecryptfs_check_dev_ruid,ecryptfs_cipher=aes,ecryptfs_key_bytes=16,ecryptfs_unlink_sigs,ecryptfs_sig=9c8812d31a548113,ecryptfs_fnek_sig=7e7a38601164a67f)
gvfsd-fuse on /run/user/1000/gvfs type fuse.gvfsd-fuse (rw,nosuid,nodev,user=user)
/dev/sda5 on /media/user/2a556b61-ee1f-4f45-a618-a811d40e6f48 type ext4 (rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks2)
/dev/sda8 on /media/user/17eec742-26fd-40ff-a1d8-2730c7aea46e type ext4 (rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks2)
/dev/sda7 on /media/user/b8c70277-bf06-410f-91ac-ce5d54ed208c type ext4 (rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks2)
user@Asus:~$ 

I am 99% certain that sda8 is the large partition.

Here is the content of the fstab file:

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# Use 'blkid' to print the universally unique identifier for a
# device; this may be used with UUID= as a more robust way to name devices
# that works even if disks are added and removed. See fstab(5).
#
#                
# / was on /dev/sda9 during installation
UUID=b187f237-9f0d-4644-b6eb-880a2c131f7e /               ext4    errors=remount-ro 0       1
# swap was on /dev/sda10 during installation
#UUID=b7b9eb33-8e0a-4f48-9196-e582abe50b10 none            swap    sw              0       0
/dev/mapper/cryptswap1 none swap sw 0 0

After following some of the suggestions (below) df -h now shows this:

Filesystem               Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda9                 16G   15G  336M  98% /
none                     4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
udev                     3.8G   12K  3.8G   1% /dev
tmpfs                    777M  1.2M  776M   1% /run
none                     5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
none                     3.8G  3.8M  3.8G   1% /run/shm
none                     100M   48K  100M   1% /run/user
/home/user/.Private   16G   15G  336M  98% /home/user
/dev/sda5                687M   44M  594M   7% /media/user/2a556b61-ee1f-4f45-a618-a811d40e6f48
/dev/sda8                650G   70M  617G   1% /media/user/17eec742-26fd-40ff-a1d8-2730c7aea46e
/dev/sda7                6.8G   16M  6.4G   1% /media/user/b8c70277-bf06-410f-91ac-ce5d54ed208c

As you can see, /sda8 is the large partition. I honestly thought I had made that the /home partition but clearly it isn't, which is causing all kinds of issues.

Grey Wolf

Posted 2015-05-15T02:26:47.680

Reputation: 11

open up terminal and run df -H and edit your question with the output. that will give us a bit of an idea of what we're dealing with here – Russell Uhl – 2015-05-15T12:45:08.873

Run gparted to see your partition sizes. – davidbaumann – 2015-05-16T14:59:26.687

Post the results of 'mount', and the content of your fstab file – davidbaumann – 2015-05-16T15:01:54.433

Answers

0

Edit: resize2fs didn't work. Try "resize2fs /dev/sda9" in a terminal.

Or you can install and use gparted to edit your partitions.

I think This Post is what you are looking for. Gparted is going to be the best tool to use. The Gparted manual should get you started feeling comfortable using it.

Dean Spicer

Posted 2015-05-15T02:26:47.680

Reputation: 611

Tried this, it gave me the following:

<pre> resize2fs 1.42.9 (4-Feb-2014) Filesystem at /dev/sda9 is mounted on /; on-line resizing required old_desc_blocks = 1, new_desc_blocks = 1 The filesystem on /dev/sda9 is now 4063488 blocks long. </pre> – Grey Wolf – 2015-05-16T15:18:16.977

OK how's df -h look now? – Dean Spicer – 2015-05-16T15:22:59.873

Dean - I put it in my main message. – Grey Wolf – 2015-05-16T15:35:53.970