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тАО06-21-2005 12:33 PM
тАО06-21-2005 12:33 PM
File System Full
du shows no file problem. Only slow down after server (RP3440) reboot. It seems some proc is seizing resources. How to deal with it?
TIA&R,
Juan.
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тАО06-21-2005 01:12 PM
тАО06-21-2005 01:12 PM
Re: File System Full
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тАО06-21-2005 02:27 PM
тАО06-21-2005 02:27 PM
Re: File System Full
on behaft of OS only, you can kill all user connect to /tom file system by
#fuser -ku /tom
HTH
tienna
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тАО06-21-2005 03:10 PM
тАО06-21-2005 03:10 PM
Re: File System Full
You need to run the lsof command on the /tom filesystem to figure out what applications or processes have zero link files open (NLINKS=0). e.g.
# lsof +aL1 /tom
From the output of the above command determine what processes have open files on that filesystem and recycle them (shutdown/startup) gracefully. Don't do a "kill -9" on those process ids otherwise you'll still run into the same problem.
regards...
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тАО06-22-2005 06:04 AM
тАО06-22-2005 06:04 AM
Re: File System Full
You can also run a quick check to see what is eating cpu.
I use:
ps -ef | cut -c48-80 | sort -nr | head
This sorts the top 10 CPU % users on the system.
Run it. Wait a few seconds and run it again .. do this four or five times and you will often see a process that is causing you issues.
Best regards,
Oz
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тАО06-22-2005 08:31 AM
тАО06-22-2005 08:31 AM
Re: File System Full
even though it is not the best tool, in case you do not have glance, top can generate somewhat similar output.
Also, slowness may have been caused by some process trying to write to this 100% full /tom filesystem continuously. fuser and lsof (if you have it installed) are your best friends to determine what process is accessing which files.
Good luck.
UNIX because I majored in cryptology...