Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-10-18 07:53, Office of CEO- rithy4u.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear All,
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I
have try to reboot/fsck and delete all unneccessary files
inside / but I still get 12 MB of free space with total 495 MB
worth
Paul Murphy writes:
I have been trying to track down a similar problem! Using the
above method I think I have found 'natd' to be the culprit.
Should 'natd' receive a signal when 'alias.log' rolls over?
Restarting 'natd' seems to have releases some megabytes.
That's not
On 2006-10-18 07:13, Paul Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-10-18 07:53, Office of CEO- rithy4u.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear All,
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I
have try to reboot/fsck and delete all unneccessary files
inside /
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-10-18 07:13, Paul Murphy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
On 2006-10-18 07:53, Office of CEO- rithy4u.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear All,
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I
have try to reboot/fsck and delete all
Matthew Seaman writes:
There doesn't seem to be any signal that you can send natd with the
usual 'reread all config files and re-open all file descriptors'
effect that most daemons understand.
The next obvious questions are would that be desirable
behavior? and how hard would it
On 2006-10-18 14:34, Matthew Seaman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
The file `alias.log' is not rotated by `newsyslog.conf', so maybe we
should add it there? Then we can let `newsyslog' signal `natd' by:
%%%
diff -r 4474abb9619a etc/newsyslog.conf
---
Dear All,
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I have try to
reboot/fsck and delete all unneccessary files inside / but I still get
12 MB of free space with total 495 MB worth of that partition. Any ideas?
Rgds,
--
*Rithy Ray, RCSA*
Chief Executive Officer
Web:
Office of CEO- rithy4u.NET writes:
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I have
try to reboot/fsck and delete all unneccessary files inside / but
I still get 12 MB of free space with total 495 MB worth of that
partition. Any ideas?
du -x / | sort -nr | head
On 2006-10-18 07:53, Office of CEO- rithy4u.NET [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Dear All,
My firewall server was running out of space on / partition I
have try to reboot/fsck and delete all unneccessary files
inside / but I still get 12 MB of free space with total 495 MB
worth of that partition. Any
Hi all,
My /var is fully 99%, because I create one tar.gz of the squid logs.
I was move for smbfs, then network die!!!
I try:
rm -rf file.tar.gz
and don't have more free space oon the file system.
Somebody help me?
Att,
Rodrigo Mufalani
`du -h / | grep ...M '
will show you all files that are more than 1.0MB in size.
`find /var -type d | sed 's/.*//' | xargs du -sm | sort -g`
will do the same thing, but list them with the largest files last.
'df -h'
should show you free space, but does not always update immediatly. If
that
Hi all,
My /var is fully 99%, because I create one tar.gz of the squid logs.
I was move for smbfs, then network die!!!
I try:
rm -rf file.tar.gz
and don't have more free space oon the file system.
Somebody help me?
Do you have any other disk space large
Rodrigo Mufalani [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi all,
My /var is fully 99%, because I create one tar.gz of the squid logs.
I was move for smbfs, then network die!!!
I try:
rm -rf file.tar.gz
and don't have more free space oon the file system.
Somebody help
Hi all,
My /var is fully 99%, because I create one tar.gz of the squid logs.
I was move for smbfs, then network die!!!
I try:
rm -rf file.tar.gz
and don't have more free space oon the file system.
Somebody help me?
Also, be sure that no process (ie. squid, syslog, etc.) still has
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 02:23:41 +0200, Alex de Kruijff wrote
On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote:
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately because
when
viewing the drive with df -k I find there is adequate space on the drive.
Usually this is casused
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately because when
viewing the drive with df -k I find there is adequate space on the drive.
Usually this is casused by log files considered larger than the available
space on the /var directory. I would like to see if this in fact
Noah writes:
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately
because when viewing the drive with df -k I find there is
adequate space on the drive. Usually this is casused by log files
considered larger than the available space on the /var directory.
I would like to see
On 20 Apr 2006 11:46:18 -0400, Lowell Gilbert wrote
Noah [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately because
when
viewing the drive with df -k I find there is adequate space on the drive.
Usually this is casused by log files considered
On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote:
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately because when
viewing the drive with df -k I find there is adequate space on the drive.
Usually this is casused by log files considered larger than the available
space
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 02:23:41 +0200, Alex de Kruijff wrote
On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote:
I sometimes get reports of file system full but not accurately because
when
viewing the drive with df -k I find there is adequate space on the drive.
Usually this is casused
Hi all,
cvsup failed on me ( filled up a 3.0 G /usr dir).
I am in the proces of moving /usr to a sub dir under /home/ which has 30 G.
Hopefully, I can rerun cvsup with success.
I will create a soft link from /usr - /home/usr.
At some point, I will want to move /usr back to its proper place.
On Saturday 17 September 2005 13:44, Grant Peel wrote:
Hi all,
cvsup failed on me ( filled up a 3.0 G /usr dir).
I am in the proces of moving /usr to a sub dir under /home/ which has 30 G.
Hopefully, I can rerun cvsup with success.
I will create a soft link from /usr - /home/usr.
At some
March 2004 3:24 PM
To: Ron Joordens
Subject: Re: /root file system full
On Wednesday 03 March 2004 11:55 pm, you wrote:
Bob,
Thanks for taking the time to answer my query.
My filesystem setup is the default one as suggested during the
installation. IE. 128mb for /root, 512mb
On Wed, Mar 03, 2004 at 04:50:32PM -0500, Jerry McAllister wrote:
Good Morning,
I have recently installed FreeBSD 4.9 and have thoroughly enjoyed my first
foray into the BSD world. Indeed my first foray into any non-windows OS. So
far I have encountered quite a few problems but have
Good Morning,
I have recently installed FreeBSD 4.9 and have thoroughly enjoyed my first
foray into the BSD world. Indeed my first foray into any non-windows OS. So
far I have encountered quite a few problems but have always managed to find
an answer in the handbook or by searching through the
On Thu, Mar 04, 2004 at 08:51:56AM +1100, Ron Joordens wrote:
Good Morning,
I have recently installed FreeBSD 4.9 and have thoroughly enjoyed my first
foray into the BSD world. Indeed my first foray into any non-windows OS. So
far I have encountered quite a few problems but have always
Good Morning,
I have recently installed FreeBSD 4.9 and have thoroughly enjoyed my first
foray into the BSD world. Indeed my first foray into any non-windows OS. So
far I have encountered quite a few problems but have always managed to find
an answer in the handbook or by searching through
On Thu, Mar 04, 2004 at 08:51:56AM +1100, Ron Joordens wrote:
My / filesystem is full. 109%. I want to know what is on the / filesystem,
what I can get rid of, how to get rid of it and how to make sure that it
doesn't happen again.
Any thoughts?
Check for core files (called 'foo.core' for
On Thu, 4 Mar 2004 08:51:56 +1100
Ron Joordens [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
+ Good Morning,
+ My / filesystem is full. 109%. I want to know what is on the /
filesystem,+ what I can get rid of, how to get rid of it and how to
make sure that it+ doesn't happen again.
+
+ Any thoughts?
I have some
On Wednesday 03 March 2004 04:51 pm, Ron Joordens Ron Joordens
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Good Morning,
[...]
My / filesystem is full. 109%. I want to know what is on the /
filesystem, what I can get rid of, how to get rid of it and how to
make sure that it doesn't happen again.
Any
On Thursday 01 January 2004 11:46 pm, Malcolm Kay wrote:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a 1008M92M 835M10%/
/dev/ad0s2 1020M19M 1001M 2%/dos
/dev/ad0s3g 4.8G69M 4.3G 2%/home
/dev/ad0s3e 3.9G
On Thursday 01 January 2004 10:15 pm, Scott W wrote:
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a 1008M92M 835M10%/
/dev/ad0s2 1020M19M 1001M 2%/dos
/dev/ad0s3g 4.8G69M 4.3G 2%/home
On Sat, 3 Jan 2004 03:47, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 11:46 pm, Malcolm Kay wrote:
[snip]
[not Malcolm Kay]
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a 1008M92M 835M10%/
/dev/ad0s2 1020M19M 1001M 2%
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and I've
deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a 1008M92M 835M10%/
/dev/ad0s2 1020M19M 1001M
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:00 pm, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and I've
deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a
On Thu, Jan 01, 2004 at 06:00:23PM -0600, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and I've
deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:04 pm, Chris wrote:
If you have source installed, that takes up a bit. If you don't see
yourself doing a makeworld and building kernel - a binary install would
have done nicely.
I do have source installed, and I do a bi-weekly source update automatically
when my
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:15 pm, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:04 pm, Chris wrote:
If you have source installed, that takes up a bit. If you don't see
yourself doing a makeworld and building kernel - a binary install would
have done nicely.
I do have source
On Thu, Jan 01, 2004 at 06:23:15PM -0600, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:15 pm, Eric F Crist wrote:
On Thursday 01 January 2004 06:04 pm, Chris wrote:
If you have source installed, that takes up a bit. If you don't see
yourself doing a makeworld and building kernel - a
Chris writes:
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3e 3.9G 3.9G -260.5M 107%/usr
If you have source installed, that takes up a bit. If you don't
see yourself doing a makeworld and building kernel - a
Gautam Gopalakrishnan wrote:
On Thu, Jan 01, 2004 at 06:00:23PM -0600, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and I've
deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 10:30 am, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and
I've deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s3a 1008M92M
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 15:44, Brian Astill wrote:
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 10:30 am, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and
I've deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
FilesystemSize Used
Malcolm Kay wrote:
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 15:44, Brian Astill wrote:
On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 10:30 am, Eric F Crist wrote:
How big is necessary for a /usr partition? Mine keeps filling up and
I've deleted /usr/obj and /usr/ports/distfiles regularly.
Here's my df -h readout:
$ df -h
Filesystem
Hi,
I tried to compile and install new kernel with another
option (with VLAN support added).But when I
makeinstall the kernel,it said file system is full.
How do I need to remove the unneceaarry things and
from where so that I can make space to teh new
kernel.Is there a place where the system
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