Skip Navigation

is there any way to increase the size of my /var directory under debian 12.7? (flatpak related)

when I installed debian 12.7 I created a separated /var directory, along other 2 separated directories (names forgotten).

I also use flatpak and this program is installed in this directory. Executing 'flatpack update' I discovered this directory is 95% full, meaning I cannot update anything, because /var is 95% full (only 400 MiB free)

Ideas to solve this?

13 comments
  • (I assume you meant "I created a separated /var partition")

    You can move/resize partitions from basically any live usb (via cli or gparted for gnome and kde partition manager for kde).

    Shall you want to, you can also merge the var partition with (say) your root partition:

    1. mount both partitions in two directories (just create empty ones and mount on them, say ~/root and ~/var)
    2. inside ~/root create the new var/ directory
    3. copy the data over
    4. edit ~/root/etc/fstab (remove the line for the old var partition)
    5. use whatever partitioning tool to get rid of the actual partition and expand the previous/next one

    Be aware that you can very easily lose your data ;)

    PS: just in case, try running flatpak uninstall --unused

  • Is there a reason to install one(1) singular OS across multiple partitions? Is it just because that's how our ancestors did things?

    Partitions are crude buckets that tell Operating Systems that "this lump is a filesystem that you know how to read" or "you don't know how to read this, leave it alone". Partitions tell UEFI that it should only use this special FAT32 chunk. A partition is not a good mechanism to set quotas, as you can see from how difficult it is to expand. A bunch of partitions that are all mounted together does little to isolate against failures.

    If you want to run an OS across two filesystems that provide different characteristics (one provides atomic snapshots, the other provides ??), that would have to live on different partitions. Would you be better served by putting it all on the more modern FS? Is the older filesystem only kept around because it straddles "what my OS knows" and "what my bootloader knows"? If it's just for the bootloader's sake, that's why we have /boot.

  • Assuming your /var is in a separate partition, you could resize it using a tool like gparted. But make a backup beforehand.

  • I ran into this same problem a few months ago. Instead of taking the time to learn how to manage partitions and lvms, i just re-installed debian and put everything on the same partition because i had no reason to keep em separated.

  • Sounds like you created a seperate partition for /var. Only way to change that is to redo your partitions or bind mount an external disk as /var.

13 comments