How to delete ubuntu MATE 18.10 and keep Fedora?












3















I have installed Fedora but it has to little storage and i want to only have fedora left so i can have more storage and because i have been used to fedora. The partition of ubuntu and fedora are the same.



Screenshot of disk



it says that the fedora-root filesystem has 0B left










share|improve this question

























  • 1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 17:56











  • @Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

    – maxim pavlenko
    Dec 25 '18 at 18:12











  • Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 19:39
















3















I have installed Fedora but it has to little storage and i want to only have fedora left so i can have more storage and because i have been used to fedora. The partition of ubuntu and fedora are the same.



Screenshot of disk



it says that the fedora-root filesystem has 0B left










share|improve this question

























  • 1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 17:56











  • @Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

    – maxim pavlenko
    Dec 25 '18 at 18:12











  • Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 19:39














3












3








3








I have installed Fedora but it has to little storage and i want to only have fedora left so i can have more storage and because i have been used to fedora. The partition of ubuntu and fedora are the same.



Screenshot of disk



it says that the fedora-root filesystem has 0B left










share|improve this question
















I have installed Fedora but it has to little storage and i want to only have fedora left so i can have more storage and because i have been used to fedora. The partition of ubuntu and fedora are the same.



Screenshot of disk



it says that the fedora-root filesystem has 0B left







linux ubuntu fedora






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 25 '18 at 18:13









Rui F Ribeiro

41.4k1481140




41.4k1481140










asked Dec 25 '18 at 17:34









maxim pavlenkomaxim pavlenko

161




161













  • 1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 17:56











  • @Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

    – maxim pavlenko
    Dec 25 '18 at 18:12











  • Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 19:39



















  • 1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 17:56











  • @Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

    – maxim pavlenko
    Dec 25 '18 at 18:12











  • Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

    – Panther
    Dec 25 '18 at 19:39

















1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

– Panther
Dec 25 '18 at 17:56





1. I do not see your ubuntu partition. 2. Fedora is using lvm and it appears you have additional space in the lvm. 3. See docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/14/html/… as gparted does not do lvm

– Panther
Dec 25 '18 at 17:56













@Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

– maxim pavlenko
Dec 25 '18 at 18:12





@Panther It is the big one and for some reason the fedora and ubuntu is the same partiotion.

– maxim pavlenko
Dec 25 '18 at 18:12













Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

– Panther
Dec 25 '18 at 19:39





Fedora and ubuntu can not be the same partition

– Panther
Dec 25 '18 at 19:39










1 Answer
1






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oldest

votes


















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The partition fedora is managed by lvm. It basically allows you to take a physical partition and assign parts of it to logical lvm partitions as needed, making space allocation more flexible. To learn more, you can read the arch linux wiki entry, for example.



The tool you are using, gparted is not displaying the lvm volumes.



You can do so by running lvdisplay (list logical volumes) and pvdisplay (list physical volumes). The lvm management tools are documented for example in the redhat docs.



Or you can use a graphical tool that properly supports lvm (for example: KDE partition manager)






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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    The partition fedora is managed by lvm. It basically allows you to take a physical partition and assign parts of it to logical lvm partitions as needed, making space allocation more flexible. To learn more, you can read the arch linux wiki entry, for example.



    The tool you are using, gparted is not displaying the lvm volumes.



    You can do so by running lvdisplay (list logical volumes) and pvdisplay (list physical volumes). The lvm management tools are documented for example in the redhat docs.



    Or you can use a graphical tool that properly supports lvm (for example: KDE partition manager)






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      The partition fedora is managed by lvm. It basically allows you to take a physical partition and assign parts of it to logical lvm partitions as needed, making space allocation more flexible. To learn more, you can read the arch linux wiki entry, for example.



      The tool you are using, gparted is not displaying the lvm volumes.



      You can do so by running lvdisplay (list logical volumes) and pvdisplay (list physical volumes). The lvm management tools are documented for example in the redhat docs.



      Or you can use a graphical tool that properly supports lvm (for example: KDE partition manager)






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        The partition fedora is managed by lvm. It basically allows you to take a physical partition and assign parts of it to logical lvm partitions as needed, making space allocation more flexible. To learn more, you can read the arch linux wiki entry, for example.



        The tool you are using, gparted is not displaying the lvm volumes.



        You can do so by running lvdisplay (list logical volumes) and pvdisplay (list physical volumes). The lvm management tools are documented for example in the redhat docs.



        Or you can use a graphical tool that properly supports lvm (for example: KDE partition manager)






        share|improve this answer













        The partition fedora is managed by lvm. It basically allows you to take a physical partition and assign parts of it to logical lvm partitions as needed, making space allocation more flexible. To learn more, you can read the arch linux wiki entry, for example.



        The tool you are using, gparted is not displaying the lvm volumes.



        You can do so by running lvdisplay (list logical volumes) and pvdisplay (list physical volumes). The lvm management tools are documented for example in the redhat docs.



        Or you can use a graphical tool that properly supports lvm (for example: KDE partition manager)







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 25 '18 at 18:45









        rudibrudib

        631517




        631517






























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