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Re: Disk too full?



On Tue 05 Apr 2016 at 22:46:10 (+0100), Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Tuesday 05 April 2016 19:13:23 David Wright wrote:
> > On Tue 05 Apr 2016 at 16:46:36 (+0100), Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > May the OP have run out of inodes in /  ?
> >
> > Here's my prediction :)
> >
> >   100000    10% /
> >  1200000     1% /home
> >   100000     1% /tmp
> >   600000    50% /usr
> >   200000    10% /var
> >
> > Cheers,
> > David.
> 
> On Tuesday 05 April 2016 21:29:00 Charles Blair wrote:
> >    Output from df -ih
> >
> > Filesystem                  Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on
> > rootfs                         84K  7.6K   76K   10% /
> > udev                          488K   462  488K    1% /dev
> > tmpfs                         490K   459  489K    1% /run
> > /dev/disk/by-uuid/09...8e      84K  7.6K   76K   10% /
> > tmpfs                         490K     1  490K    1% /run/lock
> > tmpfs                         490K     8  490K    1% /run/shm
> > /dev/sda10                     11M  9.0K   11M    1% /home
> > /dev/sda9                      96K    42   96K    1% /tmp
> > /dev/sda6                     537K  245K  293K   46% /usr
> > /dev/sda7                     179K   11K  169K    6% /var
> 
> 
> All right.  Don't smirk. ;-)  If I were good at Ascii art you would get a 
> star, albeit not a gold one. :-)

I cheated; I remembered that he posted them last year.

I think it's possible that you, Charles, are still running wheezy,
which is probably why you're getting away with such a small root
partition.

If booting into single user mode allows you to umount /usr, then it
would be possible to migrate your root to /dev/sda6, but you don't
give me the impression that you'd be confident enough to do that.

If you're running a 3.2 kernel, just don't try to upgrade to 3.16;
the .deb file is 50% bigger.

I don't know what you've got in the partitions we don't see, but
judging by your use of /home, you've got room to repartition with
two at-least-32GB root partitions so that you can in future install/
upgrade a new Debian in one without touching the old one in the other.

Cheers,
David.


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