Alexander Skwar
<snippage of pedantic nit picking and back peddling>
Yes Mysql writes to /tmp by default and yes you can change it in which
case if that partition is full then you see the same behavior. So we can
say that Mysql really wants its temp space to have enough room for it to
write and sometimes it needs a few GB rather than a few hundred MB
depending on what you're doing and how badly a programmer wrote the query.
Ain't no possible about the session data unless you've manually changed
this. Apache writes it to /tmp/ because I go and look before I shoot my
mount off.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ ls -l /tmp/
total 84
drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 4096 Oct 28 11:11 pear
-rw------- 1 apache apache 5155 Nov 11 10:16
sess_6c40c9326faf2c5ab4acf8cc28185962
-rw------- 1 apache apache 1783 Nov 2 11:33
sess_97e700cd3b82b36a9e7fc44cd898df52
-rw------- 1 apache apache 30 Jan 13 14:41
sess_c2f99d41593771d2c4ccee93ab6d3355
-rw------- 1 apache apache 1783 Nov 6 22:29
sess_cea4c86ed58f11824519ee8d09205fbb
drwx------ 2 kashani users 4096 Feb 19 12:50 ssh-DGEYh15924
kashani
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