The issue at hand:
My /var/tmp
folder is stacking up on literary hundreds of folders called "container_images_storage_xxxxxxxxxx"
, where the x’s present a random number. Each folder contains the following files called 1, 2 and 3 as seen in thumbnail. Each folder seems to increase in size too, as the lowest I can see is the size of 142.2 MiB, but the highest 2.1GB. This is a problem as it is taking up all my disk space, and even if I do delete them, they come back the next day… I believe this has something to do with podman, but I’m really not quite sure. All I use the PC for is browsing and gaming.
Is there a way to figure out where a file or folder is coming from on Linux? I’ve tried stat
and file
, but neither gave me any worthwhile information AFAIK. Would really appreciate some help to figure what causes this, I am still new to the Linux desktop and have no idea what is causing this issue. I am on atomic desktop, using Bazzite:latest.
stat:
stat 1
File: 1
Size: 1944283388 Blocks: 3797432 IO Block: 4096 regular file
Device: 0,74 Inode: 10938462619658088921 Links: 1
Access: (0600/-rw-------) Uid: ( 1000/ buzz) Gid: ( 1000/ buzz)
Context: system_u:object_r:fusefs_t:s0
Access: 2024-05-06 12:18:37.444074823 +0200
Modify: 2024-05-06 12:22:51.026500682 +0200
Change: 2024-05-06 12:22:51.026500682 +0200
Birth: -
file
file 1
1: gzip compressed data, original size modulo 2^32 2426514442 gzip compressed data, reserved method, ASCII, extra field, encrypted, from FAT filesystem (MS-DOS, OS/2, NT), original size modulo 2^32 2426514442
Silly question why do this over zram these days?
Doesn’t zram compress what’s in memory so systems with less ram can work a little better? If you’ve got enough for a ramdisk you don’t need zram.