My questions would be: 

Why management thinks 16G is sufficient disk space?  
Can you even buy a 16G hard drive anymore? 
How much space is each application using?
(Since you say it runs SQL Server I assume Windows) Do they know how much space 
Windows uses for its day to day temporary use?

Fred

-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList) 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kathy Morris
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 9:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Server Crash

** 
 
When I wrote in my email below that we have 1G of "space" left - I was 
referring to hard drive space, not a litter of 16 kittens.
The server crashed because we ran out of hard disk space.

-----Original Message-----
From: Rick Cook <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wed, Feb 10, 2010 10:41 am
Subject: Re: Server Crash
16G of what, Kathy? Kittens?
Rick
________________________________________
From: Kathy Morris <[email protected]> 
Date: Wed, 10 Feb 2010 10:37:19 -0500
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Server Crash

** 
Hi All,
 
We have 16G on our Application Server.  Our Application Server runs Discovery 
1.6.
Our database is remote.  We have right now 1G of space left.
Our Management believes there is no reason why 16G is not sufficient space 
for this Discovery application to run parallel with other applications.
 
We have other applications running on this server like HP Openview, SQL Server, 
VMware, etc...
 
I noticed when Discovery runs (during synchronization) files are created also 
on the application server (i.e. java files, tmp files, etc..).  And if logging 
is on, then files are created also.
 
Is 16G an reasonable size to run Discovery 1.6?
 

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