Re: file system full help

2006-04-22 Thread Noah
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 02:23:41 +0200, Alex de Kruijff wrote > On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote: > > I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately because > > when > > viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is adequate space on the drive. > > Usually this

Re: file system full help

2006-04-20 Thread Noah
On Fri, 21 Apr 2006 02:23:41 +0200, Alex de Kruijff wrote > On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote: > > I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately because > > when > > viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is adequate space on the drive. > > Usually this

Re: file system full help

2006-04-20 Thread Alex de Kruijff
On Thu, Apr 20, 2006 at 06:46:14AM -0800, Noah wrote: > I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately because when > viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is adequate space on the drive. > Usually this is casused by log files considered larger than the available > space on

Re: [freebsd-questions] file system full help

2006-04-20 Thread Noah
On 20 Apr 2006 11:46:18 -0400, Lowell Gilbert wrote > "Noah" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately because > > when > > viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is adequate space on the drive. > > Usually this is casused by log file

file system full help

2006-04-20 Thread Robert Huff
Noah writes: > I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately > because when viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is > adequate space on the drive. Usually this is casused by log files > considered larger than the available space on the /var directory. > I would like

file system full help

2006-04-20 Thread Noah
I sometimes get reports of "file system full" but not accurately because when viewing the drive with "df -k" I find there is adequate space on the drive. Usually this is casused by log files considered larger than the available space on the /var directory. I would like to see if this in fact th