

dev/sdb1 * 2048 242221055 242219008 115.5G c W95 FAT32 (LBA)įor the Asus X541U (same model in your other question), someone reported having to add pcie_aspm=off to the grub settings, this was confirmed by another user with U541 here Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Tmpfs tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup $ df -hTįilesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on

Now I don’t have an OS, and booting from liveUSB (currently containing mint). Anyway, after this, I tried Linux installation 2 times, without and with liveUSB, but it failed with the same “no space” remaining message. So I installed windows, to delete partitions, but it was weird since I have an SSD of 256GB and only 238GB of maximum capacity was shown. The same thing happened, except now I got a different message: low disk space 0bytes remaining.(note: I don’t have an OS, so I fully boot from live USB). That’s when I decided to switch to a different Linux distribution: Linux Mint. I restarted so many times (in hope of the installer to work) that the previous os got corrupted. So I tried reinstalling it, which failed since it kept freezing at different times (booting from liveUSB). This weird bug was that after pressing enter on the login screen, ubuntu 18.04 would freeze completely. I had Ubuntu 17 and decided to upgrade it to 18 via the command line command, after the update there was a weird bug which I couldn’t fix despite looking for days on the internet. Booting from live USB.ĮDIT: It’s a bit of a long story but I will do my best as a beginner to explain everything.

Apparently, there is an Ubuntu 18 installed somewhere(despite not booting into any OS) and it keeps notifying me that my disk is full (not true, but it shows me some 7gb root partition on smth). I tried both Ubuntu 18 and Linux Mint 19, both freeze and cannot install a Linux.
