Re: / full (107% !!)

2010-10-13 Thread Patrick M. Hausen
Morning, On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 01:50:31PM +1100, Jeff Dowsley wrote: Just did a csup and rebuilt world and kernel, as usual. Rebooted to single user mode, and kicked off the installkernel. This bombed with an unable to write to device, and device full. On rebooting, df shows / at 107%. You

/ full (107% !!)

2010-10-12 Thread Jeff Dowsley
Gentles Just did a csup and rebuilt world and kernel, as usual. Rebooted to single user mode, and kicked off the installkernel. This bombed with an unable to write to device, and device full. On rebooting, df shows / at 107%. Has something changed? I had simply used the default partitioning

Re: / full (107% !!)

2010-10-12 Thread Andrei Kolu
2010/10/13 Jeff Dowsley jeff.dows...@mac.com: Gentles Just did a csup and rebuilt world and kernel, as usual. Rebooted to single user mode, and kicked off the installkernel. This bombed with an unable to write to device, and device full. On rebooting, df shows / at 107%. Has something

Re: / full (107% !!)

2010-10-12 Thread Adam Vande More
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 9:50 PM, Jeff Dowsley jeff.dows...@mac.com wrote: Just did a csup and rebuilt world and kernel, as usual. Rebooted to single user mode, and kicked off the installkernel. This bombed with an unable to write to device, and device full. On rebooting, df shows / at

Re: / full (107% !!)

2010-10-12 Thread Andrey V. Elsukov
On 13.10.2010 9:32, Adam Vande More wrote: If you don't need kernel debugging caps, /boot/kernel/*.symbols and /boot/kernel.old/*.symbols are good candidates. You can do `make installkernel -DINSTALL_NODEBUG` and *.symbols files will not be installed. -- WBR, Andrey V. Elsukov