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Full Discussion: No space on device
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers No space on device Post 303020836 by kkm on Sunday 29th of July 2018 02:59:15 AM
Old 07-29-2018
hi
i checked with "uname -a", found that its Linux OS.
when i run 'df' command it gives files with usage details etc as copied below:
Code:
devtmpfs                                     65818872            12     65818860   1% /dev
tmpfs                                        65829936             0     65829936   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs                                        65829936       4191092     61638844   7% /run
/dev/sda31                                   45034896      44819656            0 100% /
tmpfs                                        65829936             0     65829936   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda11                                     289293         86483       187450  32% /boot
/dev/sda61                                  412715164      15535312    376192104   4% /data1
10.149.0.13:/mnt/home3                   161048251392        397312 161047854080   1% /home3
10.149.0.13:/mnt/acquisition             202904036352  166866625536  36037410816  83% /external/rdss/acquisitions
10.149.0.13:/mnt/pkg                       2134471680    1775365120    359106560  84% /pkg
10.149.0.13:/mnt/work                    161048263680  130524639232  30523624448  82% /work
10.149.0.13:/mnt/home                    161048251392  132652876800  28395374592  83% /home
10.149.0.13:/mnt/home2                   161048251392    2309523456 158738727936   2% /home2
10.149.0.13:/mnt/app_scratch              21461824512   14054920192   7406904320  66% /app_scratch
10.149.0.13:/mnt/work2                   107361168384   87112799232  20248369152  82% /work2
tmpfs                                        13165988             0     13165988   0% /run/user/485
10.13.0.76@o2ib:10.13.0.77@o2ib:/lustre 1977261490304 1324922745740 632368951824  68% /lustre
tmpfs                                        13165988             0     13165988   0% /run/user/236660

i am not sure which folder belongs to me, as this is a common system by University to all students, So not sure if all folders are working in background 'for all' or 'for me only'.???
Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment Please use CODE tags when displaying sample input, sample output, and code segments. Without CODE tags tabs and sequences of multiple spaces are displayed as a single space (which completely hides any attempts to align data).
 

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VNDCOMPRESS(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 					    VNDCOMPRESS(1)

NAME
vndcompress, vnduncompress -- compress/uncompress file system images to/from cloop2 format SYNOPSIS
vndcompress [-cd] disk/fs-image compressed-image [blocksize] vnduncompress [-cd] compressed-image disk/fs-image DESCRIPTION
The vndcompress program compresses an existing file system image into a cloop2 compatible compressed file system image. An optional block- size can be given. If omitted, the default of 64kB is used. The vnduncompress command decompress a cloop2-compressed file system image back into a regular image. The file system images that can be handled are not limited to any specific file system, i.e. it is possible to handle images e.g. in ISO 9660 or UFS/FFS format. File system images in the cloop2 format are intended to be used with the vnd(4) driver in compressed mode as configured by the -z option of the vnconfig(8) program, and later mounted with the appropriate -t option to mount(8). OPTIONS
The following options are available: -c Always compress, even if the program was started as vnduncompress. -d Always uncompress (decompress), even if the program was started as vndcompress. EXIT STATUS
The vndcompress and vnduncompress utilities exit with one of the following values: 0 The operation was performed successfully. 1 An error occurred. EXAMPLES
To compress an existing CD-ROM file system image, run the following commands: # vndcompress netbsd.iso netbsd.izo Note that the resulting compressed image cannot be mounted directly via NetBSD's vnd(4) and mount_cd9660(8) commands any longer. Instead, you will have to use the -z option of vnconfig(8). The following example decompresses an existing CD-ROM file system image that was compressed in the cloop2 format into a regular file that can then be mounted: # vnconfig vnd0 KNOPPIX.iso # mount -t cd9660 -o ro /dev/vnd0d /mnt # vnduncompress /mnt/KNOPPIX/KNOPPIX /var/tmp/knoppix.iso # umount /mnt # vnconfig -u vnd0 # # vnconfig vnd1 /var/tmp/knoppix.iso # mount -t cd9660 -o ro /dev/vnd1d /mnt # ls /mnt .rr_moved cdrom floppy lib opt sbin usr bin dev home mnt proc sys var boot etc initrd none root tmp vmlinuz # umount /mnt # vnconfig -u vnd1 As an alternative, if your vnd(4) was compiled with VND_COMPRESSION, you can use vnconfig(8) to access the cloop-compressed image directly, e.g., # vnconfig vnd0 KNOPPIX.iso # mount -t cd9660 -o ro /dev/vnd0d /mnt # vnconfig -z vnd1 /mnt/KNOPPIX/KNOPPIX # mount -t cd9660 -o ro /dev/vnd1d /mnt2 # ls /mnt2 .rr_moved cdrom floppy lib opt sbin usr bin dev home mnt proc sys var boot etc initrd none root tmp vmlinuz # df /mnt /mnt2 Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /dev/vnd0a 692M 692M 0B 100% /mnt /dev/vnd1a 1.9G 1.9G 0B 100% /mnt2 # umount /mnt2 # vnconfig -u vnd1 # umount /mnt # vnconfig -u vnd0 Note how the 1.9GB big filesystem on /mnt2 is mounted from the compressed file stored on the 692MB CD mounted on /mnt. To create a com- pressed file system image of an existing directory and mount it, run: # makefs -t ffs include.fs /usr/include # vndcompress include.fs include.fs.cloop2 # vnconfig -z vnd0 include.fs.cloop2 # mount -o ro /dev/vnd0a /mnt # ls /mnt To undo the steps, run: # umount /mnt # vnconfig -u vnd0 # rm /tmp/include.fs.cloop2 # rm /tmp/include.fs SEE ALSO
gzip(1), vnd(4), mount(8), mount_cd9660(8), vnconfig(8) AUTHORS
The vndcompress utility was written by Florian Stoehr <netbsd@wolfnode.de>. The vndcompress manual page was written by Florian Stoehr <netbsd@wolfnode.de> and Hubert Feyrer <hubertf@NetBSD.org>. BSD
December 12, 2005 BSD
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