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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to prune root directory FreeBSD 6.2? Post 302162676 by Smiling Dragon on Tuesday 29th of January 2008 06:16:31 PM
Old 01-29-2008
That core file would be a good place to start (kdm-bin.core).
Otherwise:
Code:
du -skd * / | sort -n

Then look at things with large sizes. If you wish, you can pick a big directory and run the du command again (replace / with the dir name) to see what's overly large in there.

Also, /product looks suspicious, it's publicly writable (incredibly bad) and not on it's own partition. I'd bet your problem is in there somewhere.
 

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prune(1)						      General Commands Manual							  prune(1)

NAME
prune - Prune directed graphs SYNOPSIS
prune [ -n node ] [ -N attrspec ] [ files ... ] DESCRIPTION
prune reads directed graphs in the same format used by dot(1) and removes subgraphs rooted at nodes specified on the command line via options. These nodes themselves will not be removed, but can be given attributes so that they can be easily located by a graph stream edi- tor such as gvpr(1). prune correctly handles cycles, loops and multi-edges. Both options can appear multiple times on the command line. All subgraphs rooted at the respective nodes given will then be processed. If a node does not exist, prune will skip it and print a warning message to stderr. If multiple attributes are given, they will be applied to all nodes that have been processed. prune writes the result to the stdout. OPTIONS
-n name Specifies name of node to prune. -N attrspec Specifies attribute that will be set (or changed if it exists) for any pruned node. attrspec is a string of the form attr=value. EXAMPLES
An input graph test.dot of the form digraph DG { A -> B; A -> C; B -> D; B -> E; } , processed by the command prune -n B test.dot would produce the following output (the actual code might be formatted in a slightly different way). digraph DG { A -> B; A -> C; } Another input graph test.dot of the form digraph DG { A -> B; A -> C; B -> D; B -> E; C -> E; } (note the additional edge from C to E ), processed by the command prune -n B -N color=red test.dot results in digraph DG { B [color=red]; A -> B; A -> C; C -> E; } Node E has not been removed since its second parent C is not being pruned. EXIT STATUS
prune returns 0 on successful completion. It returns 1 if an error occurs. SEE ALSO
dot(1), gvpr(1) AUTHOR
Marcus Harnisch <marcus.harnisch@gmx.net> prune(1)
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