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this post was submitted on 22 Jan 2024
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Linux
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Perhaps not the same definition of "broken" that you're looking for, but when I first started using Linux, I was using Kubuntu as my first distro have some brief experimenting with Manjaro.
Anyway, back then, I for some reason had the Skype snap installed. Can't recall why I had it to begin with, but I decided later on that ofc I didn't need Skype, and of course uninstalled the snap.
A few days later, I was met with some storage issues, where I had a limited amount of storage left on my SSD. I'm sitting there a little confused since I swore I was using less storage, but I did a thorough cleaning of my computer by deleting files I didn't necessarily need, and uninstalling any programs that I hardly ever used. That seemed to do the job, even if it was less storage space...
Until the next day, when the storage was full again. After getting some help from someone, I found that Skype, despite being uninstalled, was still running in the background, and found that there were residual files. The residual stuff running in the background was trying to communicate with what I had uninstalled, and logged multiple errors per second in a plaintext file that ended up being 176GB.
Whether I did something wrong or if there was something up with the snap, I still don't know as this was over a year ago and I was still learning the ropes of Linux at the time.
Least broken snap
I agree in blaming Snap for that 😂 good ol apt would have done a better job, I guess.
I had this problem before as well. Something was spamming log messages and filled up the boot drive. No snap needed.
I would blame Skype itself for being a corporate-owned closed-source flaming pit of doom in this case, not your actions or the snap.