A few months ago, I rolled back to a previous btrfs snapshot using Snapper. Now I am constantly running out of space, no matter how many packages I delete and I’m wondering if that is the reason. The snapshot list looks like this:

$ sudo snapper -c root list
    # | Type   | Pre # | Date                             | User | Cleanup | Description            | Userdata
------+--------+-------+----------------------------------+------+---------+------------------------+---------
   0  | single |       |                                  | root |         | current                |         
1137+ | single |       | Thu 31 Aug 2023 07:55:47 PM CEST | root |         | writable copy of #1115 |         

Does snapshot 1137 contain all the changes made since August? I so, can I somehow delete it?

EDIT Changed “snapshot 0” to “snapshot 1137”

  • Ephera
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    3 months ago

    This can be a bit confusing. When you uninstall packages, new snapshots get created, which take up more space.

    Additionally, snapshots are incremental. So, if you were to install openSUSE and then install 5000 packages one-by-one, you’d have 5001 snapshots, but it would still only take up about the same amount of space as what has been snapshotted.
    What makes snapshots take up lots of space, is if there’s lots of differences between snapshots. So, if you install texlive and later uninstall it again, it still has to keep the entirety of texlive in your snapshots.

    So, the best way to get back disk space is to delete old snapshots. That just tells it that you don’t care about whatever differences may have existed between snapshots at the time.

  • föderal umdrehen@feddit.de
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    3 months ago

    You can find out:

    snapper --iso list should include a column “Used space” in its output.

    snapper delete --sync *ID* deletes a snapshot and frees up space.

    Nb: I am not a Snapper user personally. The link above takes you to the official docs.

    • navordarOP
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      3 months ago

      I don’t have the “Used space” column, probably because I have quota disabled. I managed to find out using btdu, that the snapshot 1137 takes ~8.3 GiB.

      I cannot delete it using that command, because it is marked with “+” which means it is the “btrfs default subvolume”, according to snapper manual. I wonder if there is still a way to get rid of it.