Well issue a df and you will be able to see your file system tree structure in
discreet components. I'd like to see what results that produces.
Judson West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: Linux on 390 Port
<[email protected]>
To
[email protected]
cc
04/26/2007 03:13 PM
Subject
Re:
Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem
Please respond to
Linux on 390 Port <[email protected]>
I misspoke, through ignorance. When I said root, I meant / and all of its
subdirectories. I don't have or know of any tools to tell me where the pigs
are, but these are supposed to be quick and dirty Linux systems for our
developers. So I assume that since the user files are not stored here then
it must be the apps.
Yes, WAS does live in /opt/Webspere and /opt/wasprofile here too.
Maybe my question should have been what tools are available to tell me
where the piggy files are and then I have a better shot in either moving
those directories or cleaning them out.
-----------------
Judson West
Teradata, a division of NCR Corporation
-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of James
Melin
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 12:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem
Typically was 6 lives in /opt/WebSphere and /opt/wasprofile here. What part
of websphere is occupying your root file system?
Judson West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent by: Linux on 390 Port
<[email protected]>
To
[email protected]
cc
04/26/2007 02:35 PM
Subject
Re:
Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem
Please respond to
Linux on 390 Port <[email protected]>
I have the file system hierarchy already broken out. Our users do not use
any space on this device for their own files (only NFS mounted file
systems), it is just that there are several applications (WAS for example)
that need file space there and that is what is filling up the original
disk. I thought of allocating a new, larger, disk and copying over the file
system to that new space. I just didn't know how to get the IPL/boot text
there or does it get there through the copying somehow? And if copying is
needed, how should it get copied (cp, tar, ???)?
-----------------
Judson West
Teradata, a division of NCR Corporation
-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark
Post
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 11:07 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem
>>> On Thu, Apr 26, 2007 at 12:35 PM, in message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Judson West
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a SLES9X system with a root filesystem that has filled up the DASD
> it resides on. What can I do to get more space for the root filesystem?
Do you have your file system hierarchy already broken out into /, /home,
/opt, /tmp, /usr and /var? If not, then take a look at
http://linuxvm.org/Info/HOWTOs/movefs.html
Mark Post
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