Istvan, On Sunday 26 February 2006 14:55, Istvan Gabor wrote:
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As you can see it happened exactly what he supposed. All the inodes are used. That caused the problem. 10 GB place should be enough nevertheless. The question now is how I can set up the partiton so that the same size would have more inodes.
When you create the file system using one of the "mkfs" commands (each different file system format has its own formatting program) you can give options that control the allocation and limits. It can get fairly complicated for some file systems. You'll have to read the manual page specific mkfs command you'll be using: % apropos mkfs mkfs (8) - build a Linux file system mkfs.xfs (8) - construct an XFS filesystem jfs_mkfs (8) - create a JFS formatted partition mkfs.jfs (8) - create a JFS formatted partition mkfs.ext2 (8) - create an ext2/ext3 filesystem mkfs.ext3 (8) - create an ext2/ext3 filesystem mkfs.vfat (8) - create an MS-DOS file system under Linux mkfs.msdos (8) - create an MS-DOS file system under Linux mkfs.minix (8) - make a Linux MINIX filesystem mkfs.bfs (8) - make an SCO bfs filesystem mkfs.reiserfs (8) - The create tool for the Linux ReiserFS filesystem. Good luck!
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Randall Schulz