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Operating Systems Solaris How to use space in /tmp to increase root? Post 302978614 by rbatte1 on Tuesday 2nd of August 2016 04:19:31 AM
Old 08-02-2016
I would actually ask the reverse question:-
"What is filling up my root filesystem?"
You might help to answer this reviewing the output from the following:-
Code:
cd /
du -ks *|sort -n

You can then work down the largest directories to get a feel for where the space is used. Perhaps you can move these.


Are you using a volume manager at all on this server (Veritas perhaps?) You would be far better to try to split up and shrink the root filesystem to hold just the OS that you need to boot. Data in the root filesystem, whatever directory path you squirrel it away under, is usually bad as if your application runs away, you can end up with a system that will not boot.

I would suggest that splitting out /var (where most OS logs are written to, along with mail files etc.) /home (user personal files) and /tmp would be good practice.


Can you tell us more about the server disk you have?

Output from df -h and a listing from the volume manager of all the volume groups would be useful. That might be a vgdisplay -v or vxdg list & vxdg free


That said, splitting a root filesystem is not a trivial matter. You will probably have to boot to single-user from media so that it is not in use, then move data around before attempting a shrink if your volume manager allows it.


How critical is the server and it's data? It would be prudent to check you can read your backups before starting anything.




Robin

Last edited by rbatte1; 08-02-2016 at 05:21 AM.. Reason: Added the section about using DU to find the directories using most space
 

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

NAME
lvmcreate_initrd - create an initial ramdisk to boot with root on a logical volume SYNOPSIS
lvcmreate_initrd [-i|--iop IOP] [-D|--devfs] [-v|--verbose] [-V|--version] [KernelVersion] DESCRIPTION
lvmcreate_initrd creates a new compressed initial ramdisk /boot/initrd-lvm-KernelVersion.gz. The initial ramdisk contains all necessary binaries, shared libraries and a linuxrc file to switch to a logical volume based root filesystem. To build an initial ramdisk for a ker- nel other than the one currently running add the KernelVersion parameter (e.g. lvmcreate_initrd 2.3.25) on the command line. OPTIONS -h, --help Print a usage message on standard output and exit. -i, --iop IOP Specify the LVM kernel IOP version if you are using wrapper scripts in /sbin. This is only necessary if you are building an initrd for a kernel other than the current one, and you have tools for multiple IOP versions installed. -D, --devfs Force the use of devfs when building the initrd. lvmcreate_initrd by default probes for devfs by checking for /dev/.devfsd, which is created by devfsd when it is running. This option will force lvmcreate_initrd to do this, when devfsd is not currently running. -v, --verbose Gives verbose runtime information about the creation of the ram disk image. -V, --version Print version number and exit successfully. The necessary actions to change your system into a "root on logical volume" one are: Create a small (~20MB) partition which is BIOS reachable to hold the /boot filesystem (if you already have a small partition based root filesystem this can be used instead). If you want to boot standalone from this partition in an emergency, copy all the necessary binaries and libraries to that filesystem as well and create a corresponding /etc/lilo.conf entry. In order to be able to edit lilo.conf when booted standalone, you should move /etc/lilo.conf to /boot/lilo.conf and create a symbolic link to it in /etc. This is not needed if you have a boot/root floppy which contains the LVM binaries and the library. Create all logical volumes you need (for root, usr, opt etc.), create filesystems in them, mount them and transfer all files from the par- tition based filesystems into the logical volume based ones. Set up your /etc/lilo.conf with a boot configuration like: image = /boot/vmlinuz initrd = /boot/initrd-lvm-KernelVersion.gz root = /dev/YourVG/YourRootLV label = rootonlv append = 'ramdisk_size=8192' Replace YourVG and YourRootLV by your actual volume group and root logical volume names. You also need to change the ramdisk size to be at least as large as that reported while lvmcreate_initrd is run. If you have enough memory, it is OK if the ramdisk size in /etc/lilo.conf is larger than what lvmcreate_initrd reports (the memory is freed after booting). Also, your /etc/fstab in the root logical volume should contain entries for the root LV, and the boot partition, along with any other LVs you have configured: /dev/YourVG/YourRootLV / ext2 defaults 0 1 /dev/YourBootPartition /boot ext2 defaults 0 2 /dev/YourVG/YourUsrLV /usr ext2 defaults 0 3 /dev/YourVG/YourOptLV /opt ext2 defaults 0 4 etc. You can use other supported filesystem types as well (e.g. reiserfs) if you have support for those in your kernel. Run lilo, reboot and try... The partitions containing the former /usr, /opt etc. filesystems can now be used as physical volumes. Use pvcreate(8) to turn them into PVs and then use vgextend(8) to add them to e.g. YourVG. DIAGNOSTICS
lvcmcreate_initrd returns 0 for success. 1 is returned in all other cases. SEE ALSO
lilo(8), lilo.conf(5), fstab(5), lvm(8), pvcreate(8), vgextend(8), lvcreate(8), vgcreate(8) AUTHOR
Heinz Mauelshagen <Linux-LVM@Sistina.com> Heinz Mauelshagen LVM TOOLS LVMCREATE_INITRD(8)
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