Was on wrong leg, assuming KBs .....
Unpleasant surprise, which seems to lead to conclusion that this install 
cannot be saved, but new start required.
What is best practical approach to make new, small configuration while 
'borrowing' from the old configuration the sdb-file and various conf-files?
Somewhere a description for that kind of clean-up/restart?

Obviously keen to avoid the 'error' that lead to this 'saturated' install:
any hint?

Op dinsdag 17 oktober 2023 om 13:06:53 UTC+2 schreef Tom Keffer:

> The "-m" option to du means that sizes are in *megabytes*. Your /var/log 
> directory has 26 *gigabytes* in it.
>
> On Tue, Oct 17, 2023 at 2:12 AM Ton vanN <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Vince,
>> The results of the suggested checks.
>>
>> *raspberrypi9*:~ $ sudo du -sm /var/log
>> 25977   /var/log
>> *raspberrypi9:~ $ *sudo du -sm /tmp
>> 1       /tmp
>> *raspberrypi9:~ $* sudo du -sm /home/pi
>> 53      /home/pi
>> *raspberrypi9:~ $* sudo du -sm /var/tmp
>> 1       /var/tmp
>>
>> IMHO contents of checked files are minimal ....
>> Wondering why /dev/root full, with this Raspberry only running WeeWX plus 
>> 2 auxiliary Python-scripts (sized 2KB and 1KB), serving periodic upload of 
>> weewx.sdb to a remote, backup server
>>
>> Guessing/speculation:
>> might expansion of the file system (via raspi-config) have had some 
>> effects?
>> Op maandag 16 oktober 2023 om 20:58:56 UTC+2 schreef vince:
>>
>>> Your / partition is full.     You have 29G Size and 29G Used and 0 
>>> Available.
>>>
>>> *raspberrypi9:~ $* df -h
>>> Bestandssysteem Grootte Gebruikt Besch Geb% Aangekoppeld op
>>> /dev/root           29G      29G     0 100% /
>>> devtmpfs           430M        0  430M   0% /dev
>>> tmpfs              462M        0  462M   0% /dev/shm
>>> tmpfs              462M      47M  415M  11% /run
>>> tmpfs              5,0M     4,0K  5,0M   1% /run/lock
>>> tmpfs              462M        0  462M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
>>> /dev/mmcblk0p1     253M      49M  204M  20% /boot
>>> tmpfs               93M        0   93M   0% /run/user/1000
>>>
>>> Check your /var/log partition to see what its size is:
>>>
>>> sudo du -sm /var/log
>>>
>>> If it is not many GB, check your /home/pi and /tmp and /var/tmp 
>>> directories the same way.
>>>
>>>
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