With the exception of the /home/oracle directory all other sub-directories within /home only accumulate to 1G in size therefore the oracle home directory is consuming the space.
If this is true then the problem should be visible in:
Note the use of -xdev to confine the search to the filesystem /home .
If you don't find any large files and have been deleting files, you may have deleted files which are open by an application in which case you will not get the disc space back until you close the application or reboot the server.
On user complains about the performance of web application, as a part application support, we use following commands to see the CPU utilization in the UNIX using ‘sar' command. Some times it goes below 20 and even reaches 0.
HLW$~> sar -u 10 60
SunOS HLW 5.8 Generic_117350-14 sun4u ... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone.
I have a problem with my HP-UX (UNIX) server Recently my unix shows a high cpu utilization and idle = 0% ,checked using sar command
I need to find what I have to do to solve this problem, in fact, I don't know what is my problem.
Mentioned below is the sar command output.
... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have hundred folders under a fs /apps which is used by different users and they upload their data to these folders on a daily basis.
Using du -sk gives me complete structure of the filesystem but i want to find out day to day utlization of the top ten highest accoriding to size wise
... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I have been running into an issue wherein suddenly an apache process eats up lots of memory and system starts swapping. It causes the server to hang due to io-wait. I am able to trace the process/thread which is eating up memory, however, am unable to figure out which webpage is causing it.... (1 Reply)
I am working in C,C++ Telecom Provisioning application which is running in LINUX Red Hat Server. My application is running with several process like scmng,scspf, etc..
We have Log level setting for each process like 0,5,10,20.
If I set the FLOW level as 0, then it will not print any log info in... (1 Reply)
I have parallels container running on Suse. From top command, I am not able to see, what is eating up so big amount of memory.
top - 07:44:24 up 172 days, 18:52, 1 user, load average: 0.01, 0.02, 0.00
Tasks: 44 total, 1 running, 43 sleeping, 0 stopped, 0 zombie
Cpu(s): 0.0%us, ... (1 Reply)
Hi,
i am new to linux/RHEL 6.0 and i have two questions.
1) How to get the CPU utilization and Memory Utilization of all Services running currently?
2) How to get the CPU utilization and Memory Utilization of all Applications running currently?
Please help me to find the script.
... (2 Replies)
I have run the utility nmon in aix 6.1, and found memory utilization is 99.9% in physical.
and pressed h key and then t , in that it is not showing single process which is consuming memory resources. please help me how to find out actual memory utilization.
wheather 99% is real memory... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
unburden-home-dir
UNBURDEN-HOME-DIR(1) User Commands UNBURDEN-HOME-DIR(1)NAME
unburden-home-dir - unburdens home directories from caches and trashes
SYNOPSIS
unburden-home-dir [ -n | -u | -f filter ]
unburden-home-dir ( -h | --help | --version )
DESCRIPTION
unburden-home-dir unburdens the home directory from files and directory which cause high I/O or disk usage but are neither important if
they are lost, e.g. caches or trash directory.
When being run it moves the files and directories given in the configuration file to a location outside the home directory, e.g. /tmp or
/scratch, and puts appropriate symbolic links in the home directory instead.
OPTIONS -f just unburden those directory matched by the given filter (a perl regular expression) -- matches the already unburdened directories
if used together with -u.
-F Do not check for files in use with lsof before (re)moving files.
-n dry run (show what would be done)
-u undo (reverse the functionality and put stuff back into the home directory)
-h, --help
show this help
--version
show the program's version
EXAMPLES
Example configuration files can be found at /usr/share/doc/unburden-home-dir/examples on Debian-based systems and in the etc/ directory of
the source tar ball.
FILES
/etc/unburden-home-dir, /etc/unburden-home-dir.list, ~/.unburden-home-dir, ~/.unburden-home-dir.list, /etc/default/unburden-home-dir,
/etc/X11/Xsession.d/95unburden-home-dir
Read /usr/share/doc/unburden-home-dir/README on debianoid installations or README in the source tar ball for an explanation of these files.
SEE ALSO
corekeeper (http://openvswitch.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=corekeeper), autotrash(1), agedu(1), bleachbit(1).
For du(1)-like but more comfortable tools, see ncdu(1) (text-mode), baobab(1) (GNOME), filelight(1) (KDE), xdiskusage(1) (X tool calling
du(1) itself), or xdu(1) (X tool reading du(1) output from STDIN).
AUTHOR
Unburden Home Dir is written and maintained by Axel Beckert <beckert@phys.ethz.ch>
LICENSE
Unburden Home Dir is available under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2 or any later version at your option.
Unburden Home Directory May 2012 UNBURDEN-HOME-DIR(1)