NO SPACE Error message
Russ Spence
russ at llama.rtech.UUCP
Sun Feb 21 19:37:15 AEST 1988
In article <225 at mccc.UUCP> pjh at mccc.UUCP (Peter J. Holsberg) writes:
>Last night in lab, I had about 12 users compiling small C programs --
>maybe 30 lines each --, and I started to get "no space on disk 0
>partition 0" messages. A fast df -t revealed that I had 0 blocks left
>in /, but another df -t some 10 seconds later showed that 350-450 blocks
>remained.
>
>I don't understand where in / these blocks are being used, and why --
>allof a sudden, / is crowded. (My system has 3 file systems: /, /usr,
>and /usr2.) I'm guessing that things are happening in /tmp, right?
>Should I move the tmp directory to another files system? Is it possible
>to do that? Or is my partition 0 just "fragmented" so that an 'fsck'
>will take care of things?
/tmp is used by the compiler to store temporary files. When
compiling a very large file (or many small files) you run out
of space on / because of the amount of space used in /tmp for
C compilations. You should probably increase the size of
/ (or move /tmp to another file system, or its own file system).
Unfortunately, this is usually a painful process on a 3B. You
have to boot from floppy, it trashes the disks and you have to
recover from floppy or cartridge backups, etc. Fixing a similar
problem on my old 3B2/400 (increasing swap space in order to run
INGRES) took about 4 hours of real time.
--
Russell Spence Relational Technology Inc. {sun,mtxinu,ihnp4}!rtech!russ
Then you'll... never hear... surf music... again.
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