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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat File system full, but not really. Post 302521864 by geelsu on Thursday 12th of May 2011 01:08:03 PM
Old 05-12-2011
File system full, but not really.

Hey all,

What do you think mostly happened in the following situation?

I have a Red Hat 5.5 server. Someone, somehow, managed to get two .nfs000.... type files that totaled over a terabyte in size. I removed them and thought things were back to normal. Then I started getting complains from users via a desktop popup they have that /home was full. I ssh'ed to the server and did a df and sure enough the df reported 100% in use. But a du reported only 109 gigs in use. The filesystem is 1.3 Terabytes. I cleaned up a few things and monitored the usage with df. This extra space very rapidly disappeared and df again reported 100%.

So I rebooted. After the reboot df reported only 20% in use and du backed it up. I did notice during the reboot that the hard drive lights were flashing widely which was an indication to me that the RAID 5 was rebuilding itself or doing some sort of QC. It actually took a while for the system to come up and I was getting pdflush timeouts before nash actually started.

Those .nfs files obviously maxed out the filesystem, but why would the system not be able to access it's disk space properly after their removal?

Thanks.
 

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dcheck(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 dcheck(8)

Name
       dcheck - check directory consistency

Syntax
       /etc/dcheck [ -i numbers ] [ filesystem ]

Description
       The command is obsoleted for normal consistency checking by

       The command reads the directories in a file system and compares the link-count in each i-node with the number of directory entries by which
       it is referenced.  If the file system is not specified, a set of default file systems is checked.

       The -i flag is followed by a list of i-numbers; when one of those i-numbers turns up in a directory, the number, the i-number of the direc-
       tory, and the name of the entry are reported.

       The program is fastest if the raw version of the special file is used, since the i-list is read in large chunks.

Diagnostics
       When  a	file  turns  up for which the link-count and the number of directory entries disagree, the relevant facts are reported.  Allocated
       files which have 0 link-count and no entries are also listed.  The only dangerous situation occurs when there are more entries than  links.
       If entries are removed, so the link-count drops to 0, the remaining entries point to nothing.  They should be removed.  When there are more
       links than entries, or there is an allocated file with neither links nor entries, some disk space may be lost but the  situation  will  not
       degenerate.

Restrictions
       Since is inherently two-pass in nature, extraneous diagnostics may be produced if applied to active file systems.

Files
       Default file systems vary with installation.

See Also
       fs(5), clri(8), fsck(8), icheck(8), ncheck(8)

																	 dcheck(8)
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