My common method of filling / is to think that I've got a remote volume mounted a mount point and it isn't. For example, I mount my backup volume on /mnt/backups. Obviously the directory is there, but if for reason the volume fails to mount (eg, the server wasn't available when the mount happened), I'd throw my backups into /mnt/backups anyway and fill the sucker.
Since you've got a SCSI disk, you more than likely don't have a trivial configuration so perhaps you could share some more info on what your fstab normally looks like. If you ever fail to start X, you could run level 3 - that will leave you in full character mode with networking enabled and make it much easier to troubleshoot than run level 1. .../Ed Ed Wilts Mounds View, MN, USA mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > After a string of errors this afternoon, I decided to reboot. The reboot failed to startx. I restarted in "linux 1" mode, then a memory of past experience with a full "/" started creeping back. I rebooted from the 7.1 CD into rescue mode, and ran e2fsck on the affected partition (sda9), after freeing up some space by moving files off it, and yes, I'm sure I put them on a different partition. The system still won't startx, but my big worry now is that df is reporting incorrectly. This is what it says: > > 1M Blocks Used Available Use mounted on > /dev/sda9 3238 3075 0 100% / > > Obviously there is a problem somewhere. I would much rather not nuke it and start over. The filesystem on sda9 is readable, but when I move files off it, it doesn't report any free space as a result. _______________________________________________ Redhat-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list