Can you show me the output of a df command? The du tells you how much is where 
but I cannot see from that, what your file system(s) relationship is to
that.

I htink if we understand your filesystem, and space utilization in it, we can 
probably help you.






             Judson West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
             Sent by: Linux on 390 Port
             <[email protected]>                                          
                                                                   To
                                                                     
[email protected]
                                                                                
                                                                   cc
             04/26/2007 04:11 PM
                                                                                
                                                              Subject
                                                                     Re: 
Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem
                            Please respond to
               Linux on 390 Port <[email protected]>








Here's the result of the du -x -h --max-depth=1 / command:

vmlnx03:~ # du -x -h --max-depth=1 /
16K     /lost+found
0       /proc
0       /sys
136K    /dev
8.8M    /etc
158M    /var
172K    /srv
7.9M    /bin
8.8M    /boot
512M    /home
36M     /lib
13M     /lib64
4.0K    /media
4.0K    /mnt
177M    /opt
1.4M    /root
14M     /sbin
28K     /tmp
1.3G    /usr
12K     /vob
20K     /out
36K     /view
4.0K    /stuff
2.2G    /
vmlnx03:~ #


Looks like users can't be trusted. In VM there are mechanisms in place to
prevent this. I guess Linux is open in all aspects. I know what to do now.
Thanks for all of the help.

-----------------
Judson West
Teradata, a division of NCR Corporation



-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Neale
Ferguson
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2007 1:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Increasing Size of DASD for Root Filesystem

There are all sorts of tools you can use. The simplest, perhaps:
du -x -h --max-depth=1 /
will show you how much space is being used in every 1st level directory
off the root of the file system. It will not cross device boundaries (so
that if /usr/local is on a different device it will not count it). Once
you have the 1st level figures you can then issue a du command like
above for the lower level directories etc.

As I said there are more elegant methods and tools but this may do what
you need.

Neale

On Thu, 2007-04-26 at 13:13 -0700, Judson West wrote:
> 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.

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