good morning
The /tmp filesystem is full at 99 %
I have do a "rm" but the size is the same.
so i think that a process is always alive, but how can i do to know it ? (because I have deleted some file in /tmp)
thank you (9 Replies)
Can you help. My server sunning solaris 9 on x86 platform pretty much hung for a few hours... I could not use telnet or ssh to the box - it kept refusing connection. A few hours later - I was able to log in again.
The server has not rebooted but here are the first errors in the messages log... (5 Replies)
The /tmp is 100% full, I found there are the following big files/directory:
1301500 syslog.out.58
166692 vac
158552 install.dir.2928686
158552 install.dir.2236636
110980 install.dir.2887698
/tmp/vac have some files like :
.toc ... (3 Replies)
I am looking for a really good command logging tool to improve the auditing of my servers. I have previously used snoopy but this is currently a bit flaky and causing serious problems for me, it doesn't look like it's been maintained since 2004, it didn't even want to compile until I added -fPIC... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I would like to know if /tmp file system is full, wheather it will affect the peformance of application installed on AIX. if Memory and CPU are not heavily utilized.
Regards,
Manoj. (1 Reply)
Dear All,
We are on AIX OS, /tmp directory is filled up to 99% percent,
Please suggest, How to get free space for "/tmp"?
which files can be deleted from /tmp? and How to delete it? is there any commands.....
Thanks in advance,
Its very urgent, Helpful answers will be appreciated,
Please... (7 Replies)
Hello all,
The issue is
# df -h /tmp
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
swap 4.0G 4.0G 8.7M 100% /tmp
# du -sh /tmp/
87M /tmp
By now you probably will say that this is open file destriptor issue.
Well no, nothing... (2 Replies)
Hello all, new to this forum (member of many others). Hopefully I can find help here.
SERVER:
Brand new server Oracle Enterprise SPARC T4-1
Loaded Solaris SPARC 10 u10, patched to 147440-27
Loaded OpenLDAP v2.4.30
Loaded Berkley DB 4.7.25.NC Loaded OpenSSL 1.0.1c
Note: All packages are... (2 Replies)
Dear community,
my sql and apache server (with CMW installed) hangs due to /tmp full:
root@cms:~# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda3 224G 27G 186G 13% /
tmpfs 3.9G 0 3.9G 0% /lib/init/rw
udev 3.9G ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
7 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
rmvb
rmvb(9F) Kernel Functions for Drivers rmvb(9F)NAME
rmvb - remove a message block from a message
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/stream.h>
mblk_t *rmvb(mblk_t *mp, mblk_t *bp);
INTERFACE LEVEL
Architecture independent level 1 (DDI/DKI).
PARAMETERS
mp Message from which a block is to be removed. mblk_t is an instance of the
msgb(9S) structure.
bp Message block to be removed.
DESCRIPTION
rmvb() removes a message block (bp) from a message (mp), and returns a pointer to the altered message. The message block is not freed,
merely removed from the message. It is the module or driver's responsibility to free the message block.
RETURN VALUES
If successful, a pointer to the message (minus the removed block) is returned. The pointer is NULL if bp was the only block of the message
before
rmvb() was called. If the designated message block (bp) does not exist, -1 is returned.
CONTEXT
rmvb() can be called from user or interrupt context.
EXAMPLES
This routine removes all zero-length M_DATA message blocks from the given message. For each message block in the message, save the next
message block (line 10). If the current message block is of type M_DATA and has no data in its buffer (line 11), then remove it from the
message (line 12) and free it (line 13). In either case, continue with the next message block in the message (line 16).
1 void
2 xxclean(mp)
3 mblk_t *mp;
4 {
5 mblk_t *tmp;
6 mblk_t *nmp;
7
8 tmp = mp;
9 while (tmp) {
10 nmp = tmp->b_cont;
11 if ((tmp->b_datap->db_type == M_DATA) &&
(tmp->b_rptr == tmp->b_wptr)) {
12 (void) rmvb(mp, tmp);
13 freeb(tmp);
14 }
15 tmp = nmp;
16 }
17 }
SEE ALSO freeb(9F), msgb(9S)
Writing Device Drivers
STREAMS Programming Guide
SunOS 5.10 11 Apr 1991 rmvb(9F)