I also suspected that it is a filesystem corruption. Do you have `async` mount option on your root?
Sebastien Marie <sema...@online.fr> wrote: > On Tue, Aug 03, 2021 at 10:03:44AM +0200, Paul de Weerd wrote: > > df shows you how much data you can write to an fs, while du shows the > > disk usage of files it can find. If it can't find a file (because > > it's been deleted), it won't account for it. But if it's been deleted > > and still held open by some process, it would still consume disk > > space. > > > > So it looks like a process has a file open on the root filesystem that > > has been deleted. You're looking for a root-owned process that is > > (probably) long-running. My guess the file is in /dev/ (that's my > > crystal ball talking though). > > > > Easiest way out is generally to reboot - this stops all processes > > (d0h), dus freeing up all the resources they had tied up, including > > files that had been deleted from the filesystem. But going through > > your process list to see if you can spot something that may have done > > this can be a good learning experience. In general, base OpenBSD > > daemons don't behave this way. > > I agree with Paul: you should have a running process which hold > descriptor on unlinked file. > > fstat(1) could be used to see list of opened files, and specially > unlinked files: > > INUM The inode number of the file. It will be followed by an asterisk > (‘*’) if the inode is unlinked from disk. > > > $ fstat | grep -F '* -' > [...] > semarie chrome 537 25 /tmp 48* -rw------- rwp 279793 > [...] > > here, chrome (pid 537) has descriptor 25 opened to a file on /tmp > inode=48 (unlinked), the file size is 279793 bytes. > > -- > Sebastien Marie > >