Hi,
my NVME system disk jumped after the restart to over 85% disk usage. How can I check what causes that? Maybe some log files? Yesterday the disk usage was much lower
Thanks guys
Hi,
my NVME system disk jumped after the restart to over 85% disk usage. How can I check what causes that? Maybe some log files? Yesterday the disk usage was much lower
Thanks guys
The disk usage in the performance statistics shows a different picture. Everything seems ok here, but the disk itself says it only has 1,5GB free anymore.
Disk usage and free space left are two different things, I'm afraid.
Please see this thread for a suggestion about what may be the problem and how to fix it.
Thanks. I think it was the rsync push that somebody mentioned. By accident i had the backup rsync set on "on reboot". That would explain it, but how can i get rid of that useless data that occupies the space? Another restart didnt help...
You delete the files. And then you are rid of them.
The easiest way to fix this is to boot from other media and examine the rootfs when it is not in use. Then all the mount points will be unmounted and any "junk" files should be visible. For a SD card this means removing it and examining it from some other Linux computer with a SD card reader. It might be a Windows computer temporarily booted from a Linux USB drive.
ok, so booting the NAS from a USB stick with (eg.) gparted should give me access to the system partition of the nvme, right? any more details, where i could exactly find the files?
That depends on where you, by mistake, had rsync put the junk files. That is most likely where they are.
But: The files are most likely somewhere where devices are mounted. Sub directories to /srv comes to mind.
You can (should!) double check if you are ever so slightly unsure by comparing the folders when the rootfs is running or not. If there are different files there when the rootfs is running compared to when it is not, then the files there when the rootfs is not running are most likely junk files.
If you find this difficult or time consuming you could just reinstall from scratch. And not run rsync before (remote?) devices are mounted.
I would boot Ubuntu from the thumb drive. And after boot install Midnight Commander to make navigating the rootfs easier.
Alles anzeigenThat depends on where you, by mistake, had rsync put the junk files. That is most likely where they are.
But: The files are most likely somewhere where devices are mounted. Sub directories to /srv comes to mind.
You can (should!) double check if you are ever so slightly unsure by comparing the folders when the rootfs is running or not. If there are different files there when the rootfs is running compared to when it is not, then the files there when the rootfs is not running are most likely junk files.
If you find this difficult or time consuming you could just reinstall from scratch. And not run rsync before (remote?) devices are mounted.
I would boot Ubuntu from the thumb drive. And after boot install Midnight Commander to make navigating the rootfs easier.
Thanks a lot. I will try and check, but i also have a backup made with dd, that i could use to wipe the drive and restore a working config.
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