Ron Leach wrote on 2015-07-04 16:37:
> ron@D5s4\;15:25:37;~$ df -i
> Filesystem            Inodes   IUsed   IFree IUse% Mounted on
> /dev/md1                6816    6608     208   97% /
> tmpfs                 128214      11  128203    1% /lib/init/rw
> udev                  128214    1627  126587    2% /dev
> tmpfs                 128214       1  128213    1% /dev/shm
> /dev/md6             378583488 2627650 375955838    1% /Data
> /dev/sda1              85680     110   85570    1% /boot
> /dev/sdb1             171024     110  170914    1% /boot2
> /dev/md5             39062400   17254 39045146    1% /home
> /dev/md4              976448       8  976440    1% /tmp
> /dev/md2             9765504   73568 9691936    1% /usr
> /dev/md3             4882688    5022 4877666    1% /var
> 192.168.0.100:/mnt/R1/bkp100
>                       173170688 6320288 166850400    4% /mnt/D7bkp100
> ron@D5s4\;15:25:41;~$
> 
> Source and Destination look ok, don't they?

Yes, they look fine. Maybe try "df -i" on the server side, too? I don't
know if inodes map 1:1 between the NFS server and the client.

> '/' looks tight, though.  (The fs is xfs.)
> 
> Does rdiff-backup create any or many files on / during a run?

I don't think so, but if you want to be sure, run rdiff-backup under strace.

-- Remy


_______________________________________________
rdiff-backup-users mailing list at rdiff-backup-users@nongnu.org
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/rdiff-backup-users
Wiki URL: http://rdiff-backup.solutionsfirst.com.au/index.php/RdiffBackupWiki

Reply via email to