What Is Eating CentOS Disk Space
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But if that returns a lot of data, that can be annoying, so a way to make that show up in order is like this:
du -smx * | sort -n
This will sort the output putting the biggest space users at the bottom of the list (so that the stuff that scrolls off the top is the little stuff that you don't care about.
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So the process to track down the biggest problems are to start with df -h to determine which filesystem is the problem. Then start at the root of that filesystem and use du -smx * | sort -n to find the biggest space using directories there. Then cd into the directories and run du -smx * | sort -n again and keep looping through it like this until you find where space is being used that should not be.
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df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/mapper/vg_trvbackup-lv_root 50G 48G 0 100% / tmpfs 3.9G 0 3.9G 0% /dev/shm /dev/sda1 485M 53M 407M 12% /boot /dev/mapper/vg_trvbackup-lv_home 402G 145G 236G 39% /home /usr/tmpDSK 1.6G 37M 1.5G 3% /tmp /dev/sdb1 1.5T 286G 1.2T 20% /backup/current /dev/sdb2 322G 211G 96G 69% /backup/archive
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du -shx /*
out put keeps on counting .........
36K /backup 6.4M /bin 43M /boot 772K /dev 29M /etc
and so onn
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root@trvbackup [~]# du -smx * | sort -n
1 anaconda-ks.cfg
1 CHANGELOG
1 cpanel3-skel
1 installer.lock
1 install.log
1 install.log.syslog
1 install.sh
1 latest
1 LICENSE
1 php.ini.new
1 php.ini.orig
1 public_ftp
1 public_html
1 README
1 scripts
1 tmp
3 csf -
trying on it......
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@ajin.c said:
du -shx /*
out put keeps on counting .........
36K /backup
6.4M /bin
43M /boot
772K /dev
29M /etcand so onn
It takes a while if the system is full. The "and so on" is the part that is important.
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@ajin.c said:
root@trvbackup [~]# du -smx * | sort -n
1 anaconda-ks.cfg
1 CHANGELOG
1 cpanel3-skel
1 installer.lock
1 install.log
1 install.log.syslog
1 install.sh
1 latest
1 LICENSE
1 php.ini.new
1 php.ini.orig
1 public_ftp
1 public_html
1 README
1 scripts
1 tmp
3 csfYou switched into root's home director "/root" which is not using any space. So this output won't help. You need to start at /. So do this...
cd /
du -smx * | sort -nAnd provide the complete results.
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Adding keywords for anyone searching later: CentOS RHEL Red Hat Enterprise Linux
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Here is some sample output from a web server I happen to be logged into at the moment. I added the "2> /dev/null" and the "tail" portions to make it easier to read and use. Make sure you are root before doing this to make things easy.
[root@to-lnx-web /]# **whoami** root [root@to-lnx-web /]# **pwd** / [root@to-lnx-web /]# **du -smx * 2> /dev/null| sort -n | tail -n 5** 153 boot 403 tmp 554 lib 899 usr 6070 var [root@to-lnx-web /]# **cd /var** [root@to-lnx-web var]# **du -smx * 2> /dev/null| sort -n | tail -n 5** 70 tmp 73 spool 184 lib 1708 www 3957 log [root@to-lnx-web var]# **cd log** [root@to-lnx-web log]# **du -smx * 2> /dev/null| sort -n | tail -n 5** 316 httpd 413 maillog-20140223 627 maillog 1043 maillog-20140302 1267 maillog-20140309
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From my output above, you can see that I started in / and found that var was the directory using the most space under it. So I moved into var and did it again. Under var we saw that log was using the most space. So we moved until log and ran it again.
The 2>/dev/null removes extraneous error output that you don't care about.
The sort -n | tail -n 5 portion shows you only the five largest files or directories from each run. You could adult the "5" to "8" or "12" or whatever is most useful to you.
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root@trvbackup [/]# du -smx * | sort -n
^C
root@trvbackup [/]#Waited arround half an hour ...but no output ....still waiting
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If the drive is full, this will likely take some time. Because it is sorting the output it will show nothing until it completes.
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Boss.....Still waiting for the output.......
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root@trvbackup [/]# du -smx * | sort -n
du: cannot accessproc/11877/task/11877/fd/4': No such file or directory du: cannot access
proc/11877/task/11877/fdinfo/4': No such file or directory
du: cannot accessproc/11877/fd/4': No such file or directory du: cannot access
proc/11877/fdinfo/4': No such file or directory
0 proc
0 scripts
0 sys
1 backup
1 dev
1 lost+found
1 media
1 mnt
1 quota.user
1 razor-agent.log
1 selinux
1 srv
3 tmp
7 bin
8 root
14 sbin
29 etc
30 lib64
38 opt
43 boot
234 lib
5401 usr
17480 var
148041 home -
This is easy. It's someone storing stuff in their home directory. This is not a system problem but a user problem. Just just the same command but with /home instead of just / and it will produce the list of your offending users.
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That is 148GB of user data.
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root@trvbackup [/home]# du -smx * | sort -n
right ?
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Hi SAM,
since the server was down , i had to install and configure a new one. i will come back as soon as the temperory issues are sorted out .