On Fri 24 Apr 2015 05:49:53 PM CDT, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Malcolm <malcolmlewis@cableone.net> [04-23-15 23:39]:
On Thu 23 Apr 2015 11:19:30 PM CDT, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Anton Aylward <opensuse@antonaylward.com> [04-23-15 20:37]:
On 04/23/2015 08:27 PM, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
Excuse me if this appears as a double post, but my isp has changed and my opensuse.org email has not been updated, so I have not been able to see posts here for about 12 hours.
<quote> My Tumbleweed root filesystem, btrfs, keeps jumping to full or nearly so. I just cleaned /.snapshots/ of a considerable amount but each time I remove unnecessary files, the system quickly fills itself.
What to do? It doesn't appear to be a problem with /tmp and/or /var/tmp or /var, but what do I know.....
tks, </quote>
What are your settings in /etc/snapper/configs ?
If you have that set to do hourly snapshots, for example, it may account for this.
It's not snapshots, I've deleted all but the last two.
tks, Hi What about the global reserve, eg;
btrfs filesystem df /
Data, single: total=9.01GiB, used=5.56GiB System, single: total=4.00MiB, used=16.00KiB Metadata, single: total=776.00MiB, used=288.42MiB GlobalReserve, single: total=112.00MiB, used=0.00B
Last night I shut the system down. Rebooted this am and get the following:
btrfs filesystem df /
Data, single: total=57.99GiB, used=36.68GiB System, single: total=4.00MiB, used=16.00KiB Metadata, single: total=3.01GiB, used=405.20MiB GlobalReserve, single: total=144.00MiB, used=0.00B
df -h /
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on devtmpfs 18G 0 18G 0% /dev tmpfs 18G 0 18G 0% /dev/shm tmpfs 18G 11M 18G 1% /run tmpfs 18G 0 18G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% / /dev/sdc2 51G 13G 39G 25% /home /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /boot/grub2/i386-pc /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /opt /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/lib/mailman /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /.snapshots /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/lib/pgsql /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/lib/named /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /srv /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/log /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /usr/local /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/opt /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/crash /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /tmp /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/spool /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /var/tmp /dev/sdc1 61G 38G 22G 64% /boot/grub2/x86_64-efi /dev/mapper/paka0-paka--A 1.8T 404G 1.4T 24% /paka-A 192.168.1.3:/mnt/photos 3.6T 1.5T 2.0T 42% /mnt/nfs/photos 192.168.1.3:/mnt/ExTernal 1.8T 933G 808G 54% /mnt/nfs/ExTernal 192.168.1.3:/ 50G 9.3G 39G 20% /mnt/nfs/top 192.168.1.3:/home 50G 3.3G 44G 7% /mnt/nfs/home 192.168.1.3:/srv 50G 534M 47G 2% /mnt/nfs/srv 192.168.1.3:/var 20G 4.1G 15G 22% /mnt/nfs/var tmpfs 3.6G 0 3.6G 0% /run/user/1000 tmpfs 3.6G 0 3.6G 0% /run/user/0
I am at a complete loss. Last night / showed 100% and the system confirmed no space when attempting command line operations.
tks, Hi Strange indeed....
There is a better command to use; btrfs fi usage / Do you have the btrfs balance script running as a weekly cron job? /usr/share/btrfsmaintenance/btrfs-balance.sh script It's present in SLE 12, but not in my openSUSE 13.2... I manually ran and recovered a couple of GB on my system under 'allocated'. So, I would try a before and after; btrfs fi usage / /usr/share/btrfsmaintenance/btrfs-balance.sh btrfs fi usage / -- Cheers Malcolm °¿° LFCS, SUSE Knowledge Partner (Linux Counter #276890) SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 GNOME 3.10.1 Kernel 3.12.39-47-default up 6 days 9:28, 4 users, load average: 0.38, 0.43, 0.43 CPU AMD A4-5150M APU @ 3.3GHz | GPU Richland Radeon HD 8350G -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org