05-26-2016
My view is that you have allocated almost all the space to /dev/sda1 and the others (/dev/sda2 & /dev/sda5 are probably too small for a filesystem to be formed. I might be wrong, so I would be happy for any correction.
Did you allocate the space directed to the / filesystem or is a logical volume manager in play here?
Robin
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. SCO
After rebuilding the RAIDs on the SCO Unix, the following dialog appears when rebooting the machine.
Fssat: /dev/boot mounted
Mounted /stand filesystem
Fsstat: /dev/usr1 okay
Mounted /usr1 filesystem
(continues usr2, usr3,
Fsstat: /dev/usr4 okay
Panic: HTFS: Bad directory ino... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mac Tire
2 Replies
2. Linux
Hi all,
My disk space is 100% full.
df -k <dir> -> 100%
One of my debug files consume huge amount of space and i want to remove the same to start off fresh debugs.
However i'm unable to remove the file giving out the following error message:
rm -f debug.out22621
rm: cannot remove... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Pankajakshan
8 Replies
3. Solaris
The master copy was set to 5 gigs. As the instance is cloned, additional space is provided. I was given a new instance along with 15 gigs of additional space. The problem is I can't see the additional space, either as additional space on the primary disk or as a second disk.
# format
Searching... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: BOFH
8 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi
I am unable to understand the disk layout of one of my disk attached to v240. This is newly installed system from jumpstart.
I am unable to see the free space on backup slice 2 and there are 0 to 8 slices listed when I run format and print the disk info, also there is no reference of... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarmani
9 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi,
The solaris filesystem /u01 shows available space as 100GB, and used space as 6 GB.
The Problem is when iam trying to install some software or copy some files in this file system /u01 Iam unable to copy or install in this file system due to lack of space.
ofcourse the software... (31 Replies)
Discussion started by: iris1
31 Replies
6. Red Hat
Hi, I am having similar issue showing filesystem 100% even after deleting the files. I understood the issue after going through this chain. But i can not restart the processes being oracle database. Is there way like mounting filesytem with specific options would avoid happening this issue.
How... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: prashant185
0 Replies
7. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have a loop like
while read i
do
echo "$i"
.
.
.
done < tms.txt
The tms.txt contians data like
2008-02-03 00:00:00
<space>00:00:00
.
.
.
2010-02-03 10:54:32 (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: machomaddy
2 Replies
8. AIX
F7FA22C9 I O SYSJ2 UNABLE TO ALLOCATE SPACE IN FILE SYSTEM
edit by bakunin: until you are willing to phrase a decent question i am unwilling to tolerate such a spammed thread here.
- Thread closed - (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ranjithm
0 Replies
9. Solaris
Hi,
I am unable to find remaining space on solaris 10. below is output.
I am facing this issue on zone server.
bash-3.00# df -h /
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
/ 59G 59G 0K 100% /
bash-3.00# pwd
/
bash-3.00# du -sh *
1K File_Stores
19K TT_DB
9K app
1K bin... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
4 Replies
10. HP-UX
Hi,
I am unable to get the full FS space, as /home is 100% utilized and after deleting unwanted files, its still 100%. After checking the du -sk * | sort -n output and converting it to MBs, the total sizes comes out to be 351 MBs only however the lvol is of 3GB. I don't know where is all the space... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Kits
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
dev
dev(7FS) File Systems dev(7FS)
NAME
dev - Device name file system
DESCRIPTION
The dev filesystem manages the name spaces of devices under the Solaris operating environment. The global zone's instance of the dev
filesystem is mounted during boot on /dev.
A subdirectory under /dev may have unique operational semantics. Most of the common device names under /dev are created automatically by
devfsadm(1M). Others, such as /dev/pts, are dynamic and reflect the operational state of the system. You can manually generate device
names for newly attached hardware by invoking devfsadm(1M) or implicitly, by indirectly causing a lookup or readdir operation in the
filesystem to occur. For example, you can discover a disk that was attached when the system was powered down (and generate a name for that
device) by invoking format(1M)).
FILES
/dev Mount point for the /dev filesystem in the global zone.
SEE ALSO
devfsadm(1M), format(1M), devfs(7FS)
NOTES
The global /dev instance cannot be unmounted.
SunOS 5.11 9 June 2006 dev(7FS)