Related
*There are many ways to setup an SDCARD for A2SD, but some people don't feel comfortable doing it in recovery, or their recovery doesn't support it, or they don't rely on recovery, or they are scared of the adb shell. This is a newbie friendly way that anyone can do..
What's a VERY easy way to setup your sdcard for apps 2 sd? With Linux!! (don't run in fear yet! Follow along with me!)
Some background to read first:
Backup all your stuff before hand!
Think of it just like if your repartitioning your hard drive. It's that simple.
OK! So here we go!
Setup:
Go here: http://www.ubuntu.com/desktop/get-ubuntu/download
I suggest you select the 32bit option, and 10.10(latest) version. Click download
I also suggest unless you know how to use unetbootin, or how to burn an iso image(very easy) that you read the how to from that download page on doing so.
Links: cdburnerxp (if you don't already have a cd burning utility. I HIGHLY recommend it)http://cdburnerxp.se/en/home
unetbootin: (for booting from thumb drive) http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/
*Some older PC's (and I mean unless made within the last 3 years recent) have trouble booting unetbootin made live thumb drives, so if in doubt, just eat the 20cents you paid for that cd-r and get it right the first time.
1a. BACKUP EVERYTHING ON THE SDCARD!
Cannot stress this enough as the way we are doing this, you will lose EVERYTHING on your SD card. I am not responsible for your adhd!
Execute!
1.boot to ubuntu live cd *see your motherboard instructions on how to boot to cd if it does not automatically but usually when you boot it will give an option to "Change Drive Boot Order" or something similar, by pressing F8, F9,F10, or F11, but if you do not see this, and it does not automatically boot to the ubuntu live cd, go into your BIOS at startup of your computer (which varies depending on the computer/motherboard, but usually it's either the Delete key, or F1 at boot, and change your drive boot order to boot from cdrom first)
1a. Just boot into Ubuntu. It wont hurt ya! And heck you might like it! It doesn't mess with any files on the system unless you intentionally do so.
2.put sdcard in computer
3.go to System > Administration > Disc Utility
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4.
Select your sd card from the "Storage Devices" list on the left.
Select your sdcard volume
Click "Unmount Volume"
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5.
Select the volume again and select Delete Partition
***IF YOU HAVE NOT BACKED UP YOUR STUFF YOU WILL NOW LOSE IT!!!! BACK UP YOUR STUFF!!!***
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6.
Now you have a fully wiped SD Card. Congrats, not good for much at the moment
Ok, so now the magic happens. Select Create Partition
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7.
I put 512 just cause I was messing around but for a swap, I would do between 40 and 80mb. You don't have to name it, just make sure you select Swap Space from the partition type, and the size you want. Click Create. *DO NOT SELECT Encrypt underlying device. It WILL NOT WORK!* If you do that, your phone wont read it and well.. Then that would be just pointless now wouldn't it?
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8.
Notice it looks like a pie or a chart? See it's not hard at all now is it? It's pretty simple from here.
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9.
Select the "Free" partition space, and then select "Create Partition" again.
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10.
Uncheck "Take ownership of filesystem" because if you do, you probably won't have "Ownership" of the partition when you put it in your phone which would probably turn out to be a bad thing. Select type "Ext3" and select create.
You can do Ext2 or Ext4, but I have heard issues about Ext4 partitions, and Ext2 is kinda old ya know? I mean you can do it if you want, but I dunno what to say if it don't work (you can always repartition though)
As far as space, that's up to you. If you think you just need a tad of space available for downloading games and stuff, go with 40 to 100mb, but if your like me and want EVERYTHING (BUHAHAHHA!) Go with between 250 and 512mb. Keep in mind that when you activate a2sd, you may also want to copy over dalvik cache which will take up a fair amount of space. btw, I never was able to get close to 200mb taken up on this partition when I had a2sd running on my phone..
11.
Select the "Free Space" again from the Volume chart, and click create partition.
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12.
Now we are going to finish this off! For the Size, leave it be! It's the remainder of the drive, which is how much space is left after we have made the previous two partitions. Select the type as "Fat"(yes it is fat32, I don't think the disk utility handles old fat16 anymore..) and select create.
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13.
DONE! Now you have a happy sdcard ready to take on your Dalvik Cache, any programs you download AFTER setting up the card, flashing your rom, and or your swap if you activate it (different roms take different approaches to this but many activate A2SD automatically. Something else of note. 2.2/Froyo roms have built in A2SD-Like functionality that uses the fat32 partition, so the Ext partition is not needed).
Select "Safe Removal" and take out your sdcard and put it into your phone. Your now ready for takeoff
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***See your ROM's thread for details on how to activate swap, and move Dalvik cache to the sdcard after this is finished or if it activates automatically.***
14. If your reading this last line, your probably scratching your head thinking to yourself "How the hell do I get out of Ubuntu and back into my Windows system?!". It's simple. Click the Power Icon in the top right corner of the screen, and select "Shutdown" from the list. After it shuts down so far, it should spit the cd out. Take the disc out of the try, and press enter, and it will reboot the system, and you will wake back up in microsoft land and you can forget this ever happened
Nice guide Really good to have
is there a guide for those of us not affraid of using recovery somewhere?
Thanks for this! Also helps that i use Ubuntu anyways
xjayman said:
is there a guide for those of us not affraid of using recovery somewhere?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
(Copied and Pasted from: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=7021325&postcount=2)
A. backup your sd card to your computer. can't stress this enough, as partitioning will wipe the entire card.
B. Reboot into recovery
c. In android system recovery, select partition sdcard
d. In the partition sdcard menu, select partition sd
e. Follow the instructions on the phone to partition your sd card. You can optionally set a swap file while you are partitioning your sd card.
F. In the partition sdcard menu, select sd:ext2 to ext3. Follow the instructions on the screen.
G **skip**
h. Press the back button on the phone to go back to the main menu.
I. Put the a2sd file on the sd card (and all your other files you backed up earlier) by selecting usb-ms toggle and transfer the files to your computer.
3. In recovery, select flash zip from sdcard.
4. In flash zip from sdcard, select the a2sd package file you downloaded earlier. Press home to flash.
5. Reboot phone.
This actually seems a lot less scary then using a Live-CD! To each there own.
JusticeAA said:
(Copied and Pasted from: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=7021325&postcount=2)
A. backup your sd card to your computer. can't stress this enough, as partitioning will wipe the entire card.
B. Reboot into recovery
c. In android system recovery, select partition sdcard
d. In the partition sdcard menu, select partition sd
e. Follow the instructions on the phone to partition your sd card. You can optionally set a swap file while you are partitioning your sd card.
F. In the partition sdcard menu, select sd:ext2 to ext3. Follow the instructions on the screen.
G **skip**
h. Press the back button on the phone to go back to the main menu.
I. Put the a2sd file on the sd card (and all your other files you backed up earlier) by selecting usb-ms toggle and transfer the files to your computer.
3. In recovery, select flash zip from sdcard.
4. In flash zip from sdcard, select the a2sd package file you downloaded earlier. Press home to flash.
5. Reboot phone.
This actually seems a lot less scary then using a Live-CD! To each there own.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thank you !
Thank you so much for this!
I used Superoneclick to root, so I didn't have the same partition options needed to create the extensions as noted in the other instructions in the recovery methods.
Appreciate it!
So I did the A2SD and have used it successfully for awhile now, I recently got a new card that is larger/faster and have already set it up for A2SD as well. Is there an easy way to transfer the apps from my first card to my new one without using linux? I did my partitioning in recovery.
indiscriminant said:
So I did the A2SD and have used it successfully for awhile now, I recently got a new card that is larger/faster and have already set it up for A2SD as well. Is there an easy way to transfer the apps from my first card to my new one without using linux? I did my partitioning in recovery.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually no. The only way you can do that in windows is by using linux explorer or some other compatibility program to use windows to see ext partitions...
Thanks, I will just redownload everything later then using App Brain.
OK, I completed all steps but when I put the card in the phone or in Windows, it shows up as RAW and says I have to reformat.
I did everything twice just to make sure I did it correctly, but no go.
Any ideas?
Thanks!
neemypeemy said:
OK, I completed all steps but when I put the card in the phone or in Windows, it shows up as RAW and says I have to reformat.
I did everything twice just to make sure I did it correctly, but no go.
Any ideas?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In windows, because of the ext partition it wont see those, however instead it would just ignore the ext partitions and just load the fat partitions....
You can reformat the remaining fat space in windows if you would like. It won't hurt the ext3 partition, but it shouldn't come up with any errors... Go ahead and reformat the fat partition in windows, and then see if the phone sees it (and make sure it's to the size you wanted).
When I try to reformat it only will let me reformat the swap file.
Here's a screen shot.
I've done the ubuntu steps twice, so not sure what I'm doing wrong, it's pretty straight forward.
First was formatted as swap, second ast the EXT3, third as FAT in Ubuntu.
neemypeemy said:
When I try to reformat it only will let me reformat the swap file.
Here's a screen shot.
I've done the ubuntu steps twice, so not sure what I'm doing wrong, it's pretty straight forward.
First was formatted as swap, second ast the EXT3, third as FAT in Ubuntu.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is quite odd indeed.... Just to ask (and really JUST to ask) which version of windows are you using there? I know it had no bearing on it though... Which also is strange that it shows the rest of the partitions the way they are.. All but the last one should be shown as an "Unknown Partition". Did you use a Virtual Machine to do it? Could be the reason but I am not for sure...
Windows 7 64bit
I will give it another go!
I still havent seen an answer for this issue, but I have over 6GB of Miscellaneous Files in Setting->Storage. nothing in there shows that much info, so I know its from loading different ROMs. I have no idea how to get rid of these files. I've been looking all around CWM for something to clear, but I'm not too confident about messing with that.
Does anyone have an idea of how to clear up this stuff?
Do you have a few nandroid backups? Those will register there. If you're using TWRP, there's a TWRP folder and you can remove them or archive them off. Clockwork is the same, I just don't remember offhand where it stores them.
If this isn't it, you can install busybox, and then either adb shell, or use a terminal emulator on the phone and run `du /mnt/sdcard -hl -d 1` you can then drill down to the directories which are the biggest offenders. Changing the 1 to another number increases the depth that it reports.
Coop9 said:
Do you have a few nandroid backups? Those will register there. If you're using TWRP, there's a TWRP folder and you can remove them or archive them off. Clockwork is the same, I just don't remember offhand where it stores them.
If this isn't it, you can install busybox, and then either adb shell, or use a terminal emulator on the phone and run `du /mnt/sdcard -hl -d 1` you can then drill down to the directories which are the biggest offenders. Changing the 1 to another number increases the depth that it reports.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay. I finally managed to get this started. I went through terminal emulator and found that the /sdcard is only 7.6GB while the number in the main settings says over 10. /android has 2GB from some games, but I can't find anything showing where the 6GB of miscellaneous file is at. Even cwm is only 1.7GB from the one backup I have.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda app-developers app
I've been fiddling with this for the last day or so and found that under miscellaneous file, System Memory now shows up as taking 3.67 GB of data. I've been looking everywhere to see where that much info could be, but I'm kinda stuck now.
I now know where that extra space has gone, but I have no idea how to free it up.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda app-developers app
Galaxy S4 Miscellaneous Files: what and where are they?
So I'm getting a warning that the internal SD is out of memory, I've moved all movable apps to external SD, photos, music too.
Rooted and have TWIP as recovery *BUT* before I install a custom ROM, I want a backup *BUT* there's no room as the backup wants to use internal SD (not external)
Somehow Miscellaneous Files show over 8GB but in My Files it only shows about 200MB addressable (erasable). I deleted all Dropbox files and saved 200MB.
Where the heck are the other 7.8GB of files? How can I see them please?
Thanks in advance.
greenja said:
So I'm getting a warning that the internal SD is out of memory, I've moved all movable apps to external SD, photos, music too.
Rooted and have TWIP as recovery *BUT* before I install a custom ROM, I want a backup *BUT* there's no room as the backup wants to use internal SD (not external)
Somehow Miscellaneous Files show over 8GB but in My Files it only shows about 200MB addressable (erasable). I deleted all Dropbox files and saved 200MB.
Where the heck are the other 7.8GB of files? How can I see them please?
Thanks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am in the same boat with no solution
I fixed it
jinan said:
I am in the same boat with no solution
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
backup *everything* and reformat *internal* SD card
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=44217580#post44217580
hope it helps
greenja said:
backup *everything* and reformat *internal* SD card
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=44217580#post44217580
hope it helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did this but didn't solve the problem for me. However, I did find a solution which worked for me. I used CWM, went in to the >Backup and Restore>Delete> and chose to delete all backups in the internal SD. Solved my problem
jinan said:
I did this but didn't solve the problem for me. However, I did find a solution which worked for me. I used CWM, went in to the >Backup and Restore>Delete> and chose to delete all backups in the internal SD. Solved my problem
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
WOW!!!!
i am so happy i found your tip. finally i managed to clean the mysterious 9Gb in my storage.
thank you very much!!!
Clean Data folder
DaemonAshra said:
I still havent seen an answer for this issue, but I have over 6GB of Miscellaneous Files in Setting->Storage. nothing in there shows that much info, so I know its from loading different ROMs. I have no idea how to get rid of these files. I've been looking all around CWM for something to clear, but I'm not too confident about messing with that.
Does anyone have an idea of how to clear up this stuff?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes its kinda simple, at least it worked for me. Don't forget to thank me
Download ES Explorer
and go into the /data/media folder.
the troublesome files are there. Careful what you delete tho. For myself I had old remnants from another ROM and the entire rom zip file.
Don't forget the thanx button.
A lot of that is cached data for apps. If you use apps like gmusic, it caches music files to the device and that cache folder will grow. Root access will allow you to clear all your data es, including hidden files and that size will drop.
Adjetey Boye said:
Yes its kinda simple, at least it worked for me.
Download ES Explorer
and go into the /data/media folder.
the troublesome files are there. Careful what you delete tho. For myself I had old remnants from another ROM and the entire rom zip file.
Don't forget the thanx button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's nothing in that folder.
So not that simple.
If you're rooted, get Cache Cleaner NG and let it wipe all that unnecessary data. I run it weekly.
With roms like gummy, you can click on Misc and see which app has all the data... It's likely something like Vine (it had a huuuuuuuge cache) or another app like gmusic.
beepea206 said:
If you're rooted, get Cache Cleaner NG and let it wipe all that unnecessary data. I run it weekly.
With roms like gummy, you can click on Misc and see which app has all the data... It's likely something like Vine (it had a huuuuuuuge cache) or another app like gmusic.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sir (or madam).
I need you to fully understand exactly how amazing of a person you are. I don't know where the data was or what ate it all, but this app got it all back and you are awesome for recommending it.
Adjetey Boye said:
Yes its kinda simple, at least it worked for me.
Download ES Explorer
and go into the /data/media folder.
the troublesome files are there. Careful what you delete tho. For myself I had old remnants from another ROM and the entire rom zip file.
Don't forget the thanx button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It worked for me, I have deleted the folder /data/media entirely。
Tks very much.
I recently ran into a similar issue with my rooted nook tablet. It was killing my sd cards. When I put the sd cards in my laptop, I erased all partitions and that fixed them.
I used to be a moderator in a forum that helped people with car trouble. I have accumulated some good karma. please help me
Eastsun said:
It worked for me, I have deleted the folder /data/media entirely。
Tks very much.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
glad to be of help
Adjetey Boye said:
Yes its kinda simple, at least it worked for me. Don't forget to thank me
Download ES Explorer
and go into the /data/media folder.
the troublesome files are there. Careful what you delete tho. For myself I had old remnants from another ROM and the entire rom zip file.
Don't forget the thanx button.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Six and a half years later on XIAOMI redmi note 8T I habe finally found 6GB of data in orangenfox folder that I dont need ( for miui ota ). Thank you.
So i've been trying to research this problem for hours now. Ive jumped around a bunch of different roms since owning this gs3. MIUI 4.1 - Aokp 4.2.1 and currently synergy 4.1.2. I think since flashing aokp 4.2 that i get that "0" file when looking for files and such. I can tap "0" like 4-5 times to finally get into the files i want. I'm not sure if this is where my problem is coming from?
Let me say i don't have ANY backups. Im running clockwork and wiped,reset,cache all of that multiple times. I have ZERO apps installed and only a handful of pictures. My internal memory says its full and i get a warning at the top saying that my internal storage is to the max and that some programs might not respond. The bulk of GB used is in the "misc" folder. I've seen other people with this issue but it seems the only fix is to re-format the internal memory and LOSE EVERYTHING. I'm sure someone here can help :/
You delete all those roms you downloaded after flashing them?
Sent from my SCH-I535 using xda app-developers app
Install Disk Usage (if you have the space <grin>) and see what it says is taking up the space:
I feel as though it has something to do with the emulated "0" folders. I have literally 5 of them. I downloaded disk usage and it shows 5 different "0" folders.
Out of pure frustration, I went into the second "0" folder in file manager and deleted it. That in-turn must of deleted the other "0" folders? That free up 7 GB. My pictures and videos are still there but im wondering what else it deleted? It seemed like things would get stored in each of those "0" folders seperatly.
dincfool said:
I feel as though it has something to do with the emulated "0" folders. I have literally 5 of them. I downloaded disk usage and it shows 5 different "0" folders.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, yes, the joys of 4.2. I've never flashed a 4.2 ROM, so take what I say with a grain of salt. It's my understanding that when you flash 4.2, it takes everything on the internal SD (/data/media/ folder) and puts it into that "0" folder (part of that whole separate user accounts "feature"). So, if you've installed, let's say five, 4.2 Roms, then that info will have been copied 5 times and put into nested "0" folders.
If it were me, I'd run a nandroid and put it on my external sd. I'd also run a TiBu (under preferences you can switch default location to external sd). Once you're sure you have those, I'd copy whatever data you want to save from the internal (DCIM folder, music, etc) and move it to computer or external sd.
Have a copy of synergy on the external and go into CWM and wipe the internal SD card (mounts -> wipe system, wipe data, wipe cache, wipe internal sd), then reinstall synergy, restore from TiBu and you should be golden.
^^
That sounds about right. Man this right here is enough for me to never want to go to 4.2 until I have too. Is the easiest way to transfer all my files to external SD through a computer? Where abouts in the phone do you transfer/or assign your files to an external SD?
dincfool said:
^^
That sounds about right. Man this right here is enough for me to never want to go to 4.2 until I have too. Is the easiest way to transfer all my files to external SD through a computer? Where abouts in the phone do you transfer/or assign your files to an external SD?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have you installed Android SDK on your computer (ever used adb commands via command prompt)?
Edit: if you open up your phone in windows explorer, you should see 2 folders: Phone and Card (or something like that). You can drag the files from Phone to Card and they'll be on the external SD.
letinsh said:
Have you installed Android SDK on your computer (ever used adb commands via command prompt)?
Edit: if you open up your phone in windows explorer, you should see 2 folders: Phone and Card (or something like that). You can drag the files from Phone to Card and they'll be on the external SD.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Gotcha, i'll try that. I have a feeling once more people start running 4.2 they're going to run into this problem as well.
If you do have the SDK set up, a faster way to do it (if you're moving a butt-load of data) is to open a command prompt on the computer and navigate to where you want the data. For instance, I use C:\Backups. I'll then create a 2 folders within Backups (one for internal and one for external sd) and give them the date as a name. For instance, C:\Backups\Internal_2_5 and C:\Backups\External_2_5.
Then I'll be in C:\Backups and issue these commands:
Code:
adb pull /data/media/ Internal_2_5
adb pull /external_sd/ External_2_5
Depending on how much data you're moving, it could take awhile. Now, you could pick and choose what you want to pull:
Code:
adb pull /data/media/DCIM Internal_2_5/DCIM
would only pull that DCIM folder.
When I dump all of it, I'll wipe everything, install my rom, get it all up and going, then go through each of those backup folders and delete the stuff that's not "mine" (ie the Android folder(since your new rom built it's own folder), etc), then I'll push it back to the phone:
Code:
adb push Internal_2_5 /data/media/
adb push External_2_5 /external_sd/
Clean wipe, clean install, and all the data that I wanted back.
(fair warning, if your cards are full, that push pull commands could take several hours...)
I've searched and searched but can't figure out why my SD card keeps filling with this "system data" that disk scan says. The only way I've figured out how to clear it is factory reset and formatting the internal SD. Sadly it comes back over time. Ideas?
Kawirider1228 said:
I've searched and searched but can't figure out why my SD card keeps filling with this "system data" that disk scan says. The only way I've figured out how to clear it is factory reset and formatting the internal SD. Sadly it comes back over time. Ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What are the contents of /sdcard (internal storage) in terms of folders? Do you save CWM/TWRP backups to internal storage?
SlimSnoopOS said:
What are the contents of /sdcard (internal storage) in terms of folders? Do you save CWM/TWRP backups to internal storage?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's why I posted the screenshot. You can see that CWM is in the top folder, small amount.
Kawirider1228 said:
That's why I posted the screenshot. You can see that CWM is in the top folder, small amount.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I honestly don't get this SS. I always use a file browser and seeing things in a list or folder makes it easier to decipher for me. Seeing it like how you have it displayed is confusing to me.
That said, the two places data typically resides are /data/media OR /sdcard when using a file browser. I see /0 on there as well, if you use JB 4.3+ then you'll want to check /data/media for any files that were redistributed there and also "reveal hidden folders" to see if anything is hidden away there. From experience, CWM/TWRP backups tend to take up the most space if you have numerous backups and so do pics, vids, and music as well.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 4
I have an SD card of 64Gb and arround 20-25Gb of datas (including TWRP backup) but only 10Gb remain free. As you can see on the pictures, several Gb are missing. I have an idea of the cause, but no idea of the solution to free them.
I did a dual-boot on my tf700 to put lubuntu aside android. After using it a few months, I had some trouble and try to reinstall it ( I couldnt't syncronise zotero anymore because the version of firefox was to old and it was impossible to get a newer version without upgrading lubuntu and the upgrading of lubuntu was not working...) . As it was not working even after reinstalling lubuntu, I had to reinstall it a few times and I think that every times it occupied more space on my SD. As I'm not an expert, I decided to wipe and abandon my dual boot. I did a factory reset wipe (not including internal storage) and reinstall Cromi 5.4. I don't have the dual boot anymore, but it hasn't free the space....
The only idea I have left to free the space is to wipe also the internal storage... but as I don't think it will help (I may be wrong), I'm not very enclined to do it.
Have you any idea of how I can free this space?
Did the lubuntu installs create additional partitions?
Run ls -l /dev/block to see a list of yur partitions
berndblb said:
Did the lubuntu installs create additional partitions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unlikely, but who knows.
The other possible explanation would be that the lubuntu data is stored somewhere in /data where it is not detected by the storage settings page.
_that said:
Unlikely, but who knows.
The other possible explanation would be that the lubuntu data is stored somewhere in /data where it is not detected by the storage settings page.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Then a simple format of /data should bring it all back, right?
The command ls -l/dev/block indicate ls: Unkwown option '-/' . Aborting
But I installed Partition Table and it indicate that 81% (47Gb) of the memory is in /data (as in the screenshot attached)
I suppose that, as berndblb propose, I should format /data
What's the best ways to do it? With the option "format data" of TWRP ?
berndblb said:
Then a simple format of /data should bring it all back, right?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, but this will erase *all* data. Erasing just the offending directory with a root-enabled file manager would be probably faster.
Tugende said:
The command ls -l/dev/block indicate ls: Unkwown option '-/' . Aborting
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The space after "-l" was not just for decoration.
Tugende said:
What's the best ways to do it? With the option "format data" of TWRP ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes. Remember that it takes a very long time (more than an hour) because it does a secure erase.
_that said:
Yes, but this will erase *all* data. Erasing just the offending directory with a root-enabled file manager would be probably faster.
The space after "-l" was not just for decoration.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
YES! I found it. There was a folder data/media/linux with files taking space for each time I installed lubuntu. I erased it and everything is fine now!
(Sorry for the space after "-l". My eyes saw the previous one but not this one...)
Thanks very much for the help!