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    I don't know what /dev/sda9 is and it can stay away if it's so inclined, but I want its (MY!) 22G back.
    Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
    HP15 -
    -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

    Comment


      REWARD! Upon the discovery and successful retrieval and installation of either /dev/sda9 or its 22gb or both, I will "pay" a King's ransom of one (1) gb to whomever accomplishes this task.
      Last edited by logan01; Nov 01, 2017, 10:13 PM.
      Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
      HP15 -
      -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

      Comment


        This must be sda9. If so, why is it no longer listed? Compare to sda9 in second pic. It's not in the Trash Can but in the Recycle bin. WTH?



        Last edited by logan01; Nov 01, 2017, 08:02 PM.
        Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
        HP15 -
        -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

        Comment


          The Konsole pic you posted had sda9 listed.


          Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
          "A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
          – John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.

          Comment


            That was at the beginning of this problem solving. The current Konsole results of df -h no longer include it. LOL, now it appears. Weird.

            Code:
            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ df -h
            Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
            udev            3.9G  4.0K  3.9G   1% /dev
            tmpfs           788M  1.2M  787M   1% /run
            /dev/sda7        28G  6.2G   20G  24% /
            none            4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
            none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
            none            3.9G   78M  3.8G   2% /run/shm
            none            100M   20K  100M   1% /run/user
            /dev/sda8        55G   19G   34G  36% /home
            /dev/sda2       256M  128M  129M  50% /boot/efi
            /dev/sda9        22G   62M   21G   1% /media/richard/New Volume
            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
            Earlier today: No sda9.

            Code:
            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ df -h
            Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
            udev            3.9G  4.0K  3.9G   1% /dev
            tmpfs           788M  1.2M  787M   1% /run
            [B]/dev/sda7        28G  5.8G   21G  22% /[/B]
            none            4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
            none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
            none            3.9G   17M  3.9G   1% /run/shm
            none            100M   20K  100M   1% /run/user
            /dev/sda8        55G   19G   34G  36% /home
            /dev/sda2       256M  128M  129M  50% /boot/efi
            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
            Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
            HP15 -
            -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

            Comment


              Don't take it personal. As I said, 14.04 auto-remove never worked right. Post the output of:
              cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels

              Please Read Me

              Comment


                Originally posted by logan01 View Post
                That was at the beginning of this problem solving. The current Konsole results of df -h no longer include it. LOL, now it appears. Weird.

                Code:
                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ df -h
                Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
                udev            3.9G  4.0K  3.9G   1% /dev
                tmpfs           788M  1.2M  787M   1% /run
                /dev/sda7        28G  6.2G   20G  24% /
                none            4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
                none            3.9G   78M  3.8G   2% /run/shm
                none            100M   20K  100M   1% /run/user
                /dev/sda8        55G   19G   34G  36% /home
                /dev/sda2       256M  128M  129M  50% /boot/efi
                /dev/sda9        22G   62M   21G   1% /media/richard/New Volume
                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                Earlier today: No sda9.

                Code:
                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ df -h
                Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
                udev            3.9G  4.0K  3.9G   1% /dev
                tmpfs           788M  1.2M  787M   1% /run
                [B]/dev/sda7        28G  5.8G   21G  22% /[/B]
                none            4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
                none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
                none            3.9G   17M  3.9G   1% /run/shm
                none            100M   20K  100M   1% /run/user
                /dev/sda8        55G   19G   34G  36% /home
                /dev/sda2       256M  128M  129M  50% /boot/efi
                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                This is probably happening because it's not mounted using fstab. I suspect it's being mounted when you click on it in Dolphin.

                Please Read Me

                Comment


                  Originally posted by oshunluvr View Post
                  Don't take it personal. As I said, 14.04 auto-remove never worked right. Post the output of:
                  cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                  Don't know what you're referring to. Yall have been great. Let me do this little deal.

                  Oh, the sda9 deal. lol
                  Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
                  HP15 -
                  -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

                  Comment


                    Code:
                    richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                    // DO NOT EDIT! File autogenerated by /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal
                    APT::NeverAutoRemove
                    {
                      "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                      "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                      "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                    };
                    richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                    Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
                    HP15 -
                    -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by logan01 View Post
                      Wonder what it has against my -97s? beginning to take this personal.
                      I was referring to this comment about the auto-remove...

                      Please Read Me

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by logan01 View Post
                        Code:
                        richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                        // DO NOT EDIT! File autogenerated by /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal
                        APT::NeverAutoRemove
                        {
                          "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                          "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-59-generic$";
                          "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                        };
                        richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                        OK, for giggles, let's try this. In a terminal type:

                        sudo sed -i 's/59/97/g' /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels

                        This will substitute 97 for 59 and will temporarily stop auto-remove from wanting to take the 97 kernel away. It will be over-written the next time you upgrade you kernel anyway.

                        Please Read Me

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by oshunluvr View Post
                          I was referring to this comment about the auto-remove...
                          Oh yeah, that's the one.

                          Question, since beginning this thread or, somewhere during this thread, I have an issue typing. All my words run together unless I select the left-most "A" (switch editor to WYSIWYG Mode) in the textbox toolbar. Fix?
                          Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
                          HP15 -
                          -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

                          Comment


                            Not getting any returns for that cmd:

                            Code:
                            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ sudo sed -i 's/59/97/g' /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                            [sudo] password for richard: 
                            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ sudo sed -i 's/59/97/g' /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ 
                            richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                            Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
                            HP15 -
                            -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by logan01 View Post
                              Not getting any returns for that cmd:

                              Code:
                              richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ sudo sed -i 's/59/97/g' /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                              [sudo] password for richard: 
                              richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ sudo sed -i 's/59/97/g' /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                              richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ 
                              richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                              You wouldn't unless there was an error. Do this again:

                              cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels

                              Please Read Me

                              Comment


                                Code:
                                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$ cat /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/01autoremove-kernels
                                // DO NOT EDIT! File autogenerated by /etc/kernel/postinst.d/apt-auto-removal
                                APT::NeverAutoRemove
                                {
                                 "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^linux-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^linux-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^linux-image-extra-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";                                                                                                                                                    
                                 "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";                                                                                                                                                   
                                 "^linux-signed-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";                                                                                                                                                   
                                 "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";                                                                                                                                                       
                                 "^kfreebsd-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^kfreebsd-headers-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^gnumach-image-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^.*-modules-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^.*-kernel-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^linux-backports-modules-.*-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                 "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-97-generic$";
                                 "^linux-tools-4\.4\.0-98-generic$";
                                };
                                richard@richard-HP-15-Notebook-PC:~$
                                Slick. I believe you got it.
                                Kubuntu 14.04 / KDE 4.13.3 / GRUB Version: 0.97-29ubuntu66
                                HP15 -
                                -f033wm Laptop / CPU: Intel / GPU: Intel Corporation Atom Processor / RAM: 8GB / Hard Drive: 1 each / Seagate / Optical Drive: HP DVDRW GUB0N / Windows 10

                                Comment

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