On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 02:05:28PM +0300, Varshavchick Alexander wrote:
>> Booting into single-user via serial console, KVM, KVM-over-IP, or
>> iLO/LOM (if HP/Compaq) is sufficient. If you have servers which are
>> remote and you lack any of these features, I'm both surprised and not
>> sure what
Booting into single-user via serial console, KVM, KVM-over-IP, or
iLO/LOM (if HP/Compaq) is sufficient. If you have servers which are
remote and you lack any of these features, I'm both surprised and not
sure what to tell you. You'll encounter this problem with any OS, not
just FreeBSD.
I'm lo
On Wed, 12 Nov 2008, Adrian Penisoara wrote:
What kind of applications are you running on the machine ? Are they
mmap'ing files on the filesystem in quesiton (which one ?) ?
mainly apache, sphinx's search daemon and several perl scripts
AFAIR even if you delete a big file the disk space ma
Le Wednesday 12 November 2008, Varshavchick Alexander a écrit :
> I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
> complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition
> in question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes.
> Then all by it
Hi,
What kind of applications are you running on the machine ? Are they
mmap'ing files on the filesystem in quesiton (which one ?) ?
AFAIR even if you delete a big file the disk space may not be
reclaimed if a process still has the file open.
If you reboot the machine or restart some of the
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 03:34:11PM +0300, Varshavchick Alexander wrote:
> I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
> complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition in
> question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes. Then
Varshavchick Alexander wrote:
>
> I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
> complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition
> in question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes.
> Then all by itself the error dissapears, only
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 05:26:58PM +0300, Varshavchick Alexander wrote:
>> I would start by taking the machine down, booting it into single-user,
>> and running fsck -y. background fsck does not catch all errors.
>
> Okay then, are there any ways of performing it remotely, without my going
> to t
I would start by taking the machine down, booting it into single-user,
and running fsck -y. background fsck does not catch all errors.
Okay then, are there any ways of performing it remotely, without my going
to the data center and standing near the server for an hour while it
checks? I mean
On Wed, 12 Nov 2008, Jeremy Chadwick wrote:
I would start by taking the machine down, booting it into single-user,
and running fsck -y. background fsck does not catch all errors.
Background fsck has been turned off from the beginning, and a couple of
weeks ago when there was a power break, f
On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 03:34:11PM +0300, Varshavchick Alexander wrote:
> I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
> complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition in
> question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes.
> Th
I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition
in question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes.
Then all by itself the error dissapears, only to be repeated several hours
later.
I have an old enough server with FreeBSD 5.4 which from time to time
complains about filesystem full. But the problem is that the partition in
question has about 15G free space and more than 1000 free inodes. Then
all by itself the error dissapears, only to be repeated several hours
later.
13 matches
Mail list logo