For some reason Calibre won’t let me do anything because “drive is full” which I assume has to do with this.

Update: I believe I “fixed” the error with Calibre by using FlatSeal to add environment variable CALIBRE_TEMP_DIR that changes the Temp directory to something else. So far that’s the only program I’ve seen give trouble.

  • @[email protected]
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    331 month ago

    That is your / (root) partition. You can’t write to it because Aurora is an atomic & immutable distro.

    Source: I use Aurora & Bazzite.

    • Dremor
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      1 month ago

      While true, why are you linking this comment in almost all the other comments? They are not incorrect, it just makes you look like an ass.

      Nerd joke

      break;

      • @[email protected]
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        91 month ago

        While true, why are you linking this comment in almost all the other comments?

        I’ve been stuck repeatedly asking myself this question ever since reading your comment 😩 Please be careful about throwing infinite while true loops around! Now I need someone to Ctrl-C me.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Well, I replied to two comments. I was just trying to let them learn the actual cause of OP’s problem so they can help others in the future. I am sorry if I didn’t follow proper etiquette.

        • Dremor
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          11 month ago

          I counted 3 of them.

          Problem is that by doing that you are basically telling them “my answer is better than yours”. That not yours to decide, and that’s the reason you get downvoted despite having a part of what OP was searching for.

          Just think of the obnoxious kid that’d boast for having half a point more than you did. You basically did the internet equivalent.

    • JediwanOP
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      1 month ago

      How’d it get full then? And if it’s supposed to be 100%, any ideas on how can I get Calibre (so far the only app I’ve noticed that is giving trouble) to ignore it?

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        It comes full from the first boot, because you’re not supposed to be able to write to it. That’s kinda he point of an immutable distro

        • JediwanOP
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          11 month ago

          Got it thanks, I think it’s weird it shows up in Dolphin this way but at least I know what it is now.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 month ago

            Yeah, I get that. But also, the root mount point is a valid partition, and it is full, so it makes sense why it shows up that way.

            I think a lot of the confusion is letting go to old habits and knowledge that don’t exactly work with the new system. In still going through that a lot myself (and will probably be making my own troubleshooting post when I have time), but it’s always good to experiment and see what you can learn.

            Best of luck friend!

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Are you trying to install the Flatpak? The native install probably won’t work on an immutable distro.

        • JediwanOP
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          11 month ago

          Calibre installs fine (flatpak). I updated my post but I was able to change the temp directory which “fixed” it.

    • JediwanOP
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      31 month ago

      That makes sense, thank you! How can I clear up space in it?

      • BlackEco
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        81 month ago

        You can’t, it just part of how Fedora works now. Maybe Fedora should patch Dolphin to take /sysroot into account instead of /

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        You don’t, it’s the immutable root partition. You probably need to find the point it’s trying to write to and link it to a location it can write to.

        Note: I’m still a newbie to atomic desktops too.

        • JediwanOP
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          61 month ago

          You were correct, I believe I “fixed” the error with Calibre by using Flatseal to add an environment variable CALIBRE_TEMP_DIR that changed the Temp directory to something else.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        How are you trying to install Calibre? Is it via Flatpak? AppImage?

        Did you try it from here? https://calibre-ebook.com/download_linux

        I’m guessing that that method won’t work with atomic distros. I’m guessing that it’s trying to copy files to an immutable spot.

        I would try looking for a Flatpak first.

        I was going to suggest the portable one as a backup but that’s only for Windows :(

        • JediwanOP
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          21 month ago

          Appreciate the response, I updated my post but I “fixed” this by changing Calibre’s temp directory.

  • pewpew
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    131 month ago

    That’s the root partition, which is the core system partition. It’s probably read only because Aurora is an immutable system, that means that it doesn’t let you write to the system partition by default

    • pewpew
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      61 month ago

      From https://docs.getaurora.dev/ “System updates are image-based and automatic. Applications are logically separated from the system by using Flatpaks for graphical applications and brew for command line applications. Workloads for development are containerized.” Correct me if I’m wrong, I’ve never heard of this distro before

  • IngeniousRocks (They/She)
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    71 month ago

    This is completely unrelated to your problem:

    The calibre website recommends extremely strongly against using their software packaged by anyone else other than calibre themselves as they are often (see usually) buggy or extremely outdated.

    It may be worth it to manually “install” the app from their website somewhere in your ~/.local/ and see if you have less issues using the official package.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 month ago

    Fyi if you find it annoying to see this this everytime you open Dolphin, you can right-click it and set it to hidden

  • @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    It’s smol, probably your boot partition, or some rogue partition got created during OS installation