(04-30-2017, 05:10 PM)johnnyboy5000 link Wrote: I didn't realize that 12 GB out my 64 GB SSD was taken for a swap drive when I installed Linux Lite. Does anyone know how I can delete that? My PC has 12 GB ram which is a lot for Linux Lite so I would probably never need the swap drive anyway. Thanks for any help.
As far as I know this way:
- Identify the file names of the swap partitions. To do so, list swap partitions with the command "[tt]swapon -s[/tt]".
 
- Deactivate swap with the command "[tt]swapoff[/tt]". For example: "[tt]swapoff /dev/sda7[/tt]", if sda7 is your swap partition.
 
- Eliminate lines from the file "[tt]fstab[/tt]" in the directory "[tt]/etc[/tt]", which would mount the swap partitions after any start of Linux.
 
- Delete the swap partitions. (You can do this from GUI with GParted or from command line with cfdisk. Be careful, but it's not complicated.)
 
In my own "[tt]fstab[/tt]" for example are two lines for mounting the swap partitions:
Code:
# swap was on /dev/sda11 during installation
UUID=52a1d79c-d752-4904-b608-c2b66129a913 none            swap    sw              0       0
# swap was on /dev/sda7 during installation
UUID=a6ececfd-2af5-4877-abc4-52e90b7254ea none            swap    sw              0       0If I would delete those two lines, both preceded with a comment, Linux would not try to mount those swap partitions at start.
More information on commands to delete a partition: How to create or delete partitions with fdisk.
"Show up on time, know your lines, and don't bump into the furniture."
	
	

 
 

