Sure thing. Happy to help.
You might want to consider rotating your logs periodically too so you
never run into the problem again. I'm running Fedora Core 1 right now
and have most of my web apps logging to /var/log/httpd/. Apparently
something in the distro autorotates them for me so it's pretty
effortless. Also since they logs aren't in the same place as my web
apps (I also serve them from /home) I know the two should rarely (if
ever) influence one another.
Then again, you'll probably never forget to check your disk partitions
after this and it'll likely never be a problem again... because I know I
still check them regularly to this day =)
-Cliff
Matthew Smith wrote:
> Cliff,
>
> Thanks for your quick response. Here is a snippet of the output of 'df -h':
>
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/hdc5 7.2G 7.0G 0 100% /home
>
> :)
>
> It now looks like this:
>
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/hdc5 7.2G 6.0G 950M 87% /home
>
> ...and everything is working perfectly. Thank you so much for your excellent
> advice. I didn't even think to check the size of all the Apache logs which
> have built up over the months - time to do some archiving I think!!!
>
> Thanks again.
>
>
> Matt.
>
>
>>Matt,
>>
>>
>>I hate to ask questions like this, but actually had the same problem
>>about 3 years ago with CF4.5 on Red Hat 6.2: are any of your drive
>>partitions full? See what "df -h" gives you. I've learned to always
>>ask the simplest questions first, but if that's not it, we can continue
>>to try and give you a hand =)
>>
>>
>>-Cliff
>
>
>
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