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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers FILESYSTEM not FULL, PERMISSION is 777, but cant write to the server Post 302880512 by bakunin on Friday 20th of December 2013 05:07:38 AM
Old 12-20-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by kenshinhimura
the inodes are good since the FILESYTEM is just 58%
Note: the space on the filesystem is used to store data, the inodes are used to store metadata. If your files are big enough you run out of space, if your files are many enough you run out of inodes.

Quote:
Originally Posted by kenshinhimura
permission denied
Now, this is something entirely different: you do not lack space, you lack permissions.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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space(4)							   File Formats 							  space(4)

NAME
space - disk space requirement file DESCRIPTION
space is an ASCII file that gives information about disk space requirements for the target environment. The space file defines space needed beyond what is used by objects defined in the prototype(4) file; for example, files which will be installed with the installf(1M) command. The space file should define the maximum amount of additional space that a package will require. The generic format of a line in this file is: pathname blocks inodes Definitions for the fields are as follows: pathname Specify a directory name which may or may not be the mount point for a filesystem. Names that do not begin with a slash ('/') indicate relocatable directories. blocks Define the number of disk blocks required for installation of the files and directory entries contained in the pathname (using a 512-byte block size). inodes Define the number of inodes required for installation of the files and directory entries contained in the pathname. EXAMPLES
Example 1 A sample file. # extra space required by config data which is # dynamically loaded onto the system data 500 1 SEE ALSO
installf(1M), prototype(4) Application Packaging Developer's Guide SunOS 5.11 7 Feb 1997 space(4)
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