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Operating Systems Solaris How to resolve Filesystem Full? Post 302562450 by christr on Friday 7th of October 2011 12:40:47 AM
Old 10-07-2011
Something must be writing a large number of small files to be taking up all your inodes. Maybe do a search of the newest files, and see what's filling it up.

Example: This would list the files written in the last 7 days.

find / -name "*" -ctime +7
 

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ff(1M)                                                    System Administration Commands                                                    ff(1M)

NAME
ff - list file names and statistics for a file system SYNOPSIS
ff [-F FSType] [-V] [generic_options] [-o specific_options] special... DESCRIPTION
ff prints the pathnames and inode numbers of files in the file system which resides on the special device special. Other information about the files may be printed using options described below. Selection criteria may be used to instruct ff to only print information for cer- tain files. If no selection criteria are specified, information for all files considered will be printed (the default); the -i option may be used to limit files to those whose inodes are specified. Output is sorted in ascending inode number order. The default line produced by ff is: path-name i-number The maximum information the command will provide is: path-name i-number size uid OPTIONS
-F Specify the FSType on which to operate. The FSType should either be specified here or be determinable from /etc/vfstab by matching the special with an entry in the table, or by consulting /etc/default/fs. -V Echo the complete command line, but do not execute the command. The command line is generated by using the options and arguments provided by the user and adding to them information derived from /etc/vfstab. This option may be used to verify and validate the command line. generic_options Options that are supported by most FSType-specific modules of the command. The following options are available: -I Do not print the i-node number after each path name. -l Generate a supplementary list of all path names for multiply-linked files. -p prefix The specified prefix will be added to each generated path name. The default is `.' (dot). -s Print the file size, in bytes, after each path name. -u Print the owner's login name after each path name. -a -n Select if the file has been accessed in n days. -m -n Select if the file has been written or created in n days. -c -n Select if file's status has been changed in n days. -n file Select if the file has been modified more recently than the argument file. -i i-node-list Generate names for only those i-nodes specified in i-node-list. i-node-list is a list of numbers separated by commas (with no intervening spaces). -o Specify FSType-specific options in a comma separated (without spaces) list of suboptions and keyword-attribute pairs for interpretation by the FSType-specific module of the command. OPERANDS
special A special device. USAGE
See largefile(5) for the description of the behavior of ff when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 2**31 bytes). FILES
/etc/default/fs default local file system type. Default values can be set for the following flags in /etc/default/fs. For example: LOCAL=ufs LOCAL The default partition for a command if no FSType is specified. /etc/vfstab list of default parameters for each file system ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
find(1), ncheck(1M), stat(2), vfstab(4), attributes(5), largefile(5) Manual pages for the FSType-specific modules of ff. NOTES
This command may not be supported for all FSTypes. The -a, -m, and -c flags examine the st_atime, st_mtime, and st_ctime fields of the stat structure respectively. (See stat(2).) SunOS 5.10 10 Feb 1997 ff(1M)
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