07-02-2007
java application holds lot of disk space
Hi,
I am running a java application in unix box to process 20000 files. Each file sizes around 300 bytes. Application keep polls the input folder and moves to the respective output folders. The disk partition sizes 5GB. df -k shows only 900 mb free while running the application. When I stop the application it shows 3 GB freespace. What are all the potential reasons for this?.
Thanks in advance,
Balaji
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
Can someone please tell me which command to use to determine the available disk space on a given disk device?
I have to write a shell script that compresses files and stores them in a specific location but I am not sure how "conservative" I should be?
Thanks in advance!
Al. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: alan
4 Replies
2. UNIX and Linux Applications
i had a confusion on the installed directory of my application server
a. if I create a domain w/o putting in directory, the domain automatically goes to /var/appserver/domains directory.
I need it to be under /opt/SUNWappserver/domains.. If I will include this in domain creation, may logs are... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: lhareigh890
0 Replies
3. Programming
Hello all, This is my first java application since college (years ago..)
What it basically needs to do, is verify that it can connect to a server, and once it is connected, run a series of AIX commands to verify that certain processes are running, and if they aren't running, it needs to start... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jeffs42885
1 Replies
4. Programming
Hi,
(First post, please be gental!)
I have a java app that I am running on unix (centos)
But it keeps dying randomly. The times seem random from anything between 3 hours and 3 days.
I have a cronjob running to restart it when ever it dies but I would rather this happened less often.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sm9ai
2 Replies
5. Programming
My desired output is
run:
for this 1
for this 2
for this 3
for this 4
for this 5
for this 1,2
1->2
for this 2,3
2->3
for this 3,4
3->4
for this 4,5
4->5
for this 1,2,3
1->2,3 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vaibhavkorde
2 Replies
6. Solaris
Hi!
I have a m3000 server with solaris 10. Clients connecting to server using Xmanager. But when they open a Java based application its very slow and some times hanging. But when I tried with VNC it works fine. Is this a BUG in Xmanager? Or Is there any method to solve this?
Thanks,
Charith (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: charith.upendra
3 Replies
NEW(1) [nmh-1.5] NEW(1)
NAME
new - report on folders with new messages
fnext - set current folder to next folder with new messages
fprev - set current folder to previous folder with new messages
unseen - scan new messages in all folders with new messages
SYNOPSIS
new [sequences] [-mode mode] [-folders foldersfile] [-version] [-help]
fnext is equivalent to new -mode fnext
fprev is equivalent to new -mode fprev
unseen is equivalent to new -mode unseen
DESCRIPTION
New in its default mode produces a one-line-per-folder listing of all folders containing messages in the listed sequences or in the
sequences listed in the profile entry "Unseen-Sequence". Each line contains the folder, the number of messages in the desired sequences,
and the message lists from the .mh_sequences file. For example:
foo 11.* 40-50
bar 380. 760-772 824-828
total 391.
The `*' on foo indicates that it is the current folder. The last line shows the total number of messages in the desired sequences.
New crawls the folder hierarchy recursively to find all folders, and prints them in lexicographic order. Override this behavior by provid-
ing foldersfile containing the pre-sorted list of folders new should check, one per line.
In fnext and fprev modes, new instead changes to the next or previous matching folder, respectively.
In unseen mode, new executes scan sequences for each matching folder.
FILES
$HOME/.mh_profile The user profile
PROFILE COMPONENTS
Path: To determine the user's nmh directory
Current-Folder: To find the default current folder
Unseen-Sequence: The name of the unseen message sequence
SEE ALSO
scan(1), mh-format(5)
HISTORY
Based on Luke Mewburn's new (http://www.mewburn.net/luke/src/new).
MH.6.8 11 June 2012 NEW(1)