/var full
Paul Schmehl
pschmehl_lists at tx.rr.com
Thu Jun 19 04:47:14 UTC 2008
--On June 18, 2008 11:59:49 PM -0400 Sahil Tandon <sahil at tandon.net> wrote:
> Paul Schmehl <pschmehl_lists at tx.rr.com> wrote:
>
>> At 10PM (local time) this evening, a server started reporting that /var
>> was full. When I ssh'd in to the server to investigate, df said /var
>> was at 2% full (5.1G) and dh reported the same (5.1G).
>> /var/log/dmesg.today is full of messages listing multiple entries with
>> the same inode number followed by one entry listing dd as the culprit.
>>
>> +pid 730 (mysqld), uid 88 inumber 7089166 on /var: filesystem full
>
> [...]
>
>> Was this some sort of temporary glitch? Or something more ominous?
>> Why would toor be running dd? Is it some sort of file recovery
>> routine triggered by filesystem full messages?
>
> This appears to be mysql-related:
>
I gathered that from the error messages.
> http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/temporary-files.html
Hmmm..tmpdir is not defined in /etc/my.cnf, so if I'm reading this right,
mysqld *should* use /tmp for its temporary files. This server has a /tmp
partition that is 3.2GB, so that should be more than ample space *if*
mysqld is really using it. It appears that it may be using /var/tmp
instead, which would be incorrect behavior *if* I'm reading their docs
right. But this /var partition is 300GB, so that's a really, really huge
temporary file.
>
> Also, what is the output of 'df -i /var'?
>
# df -i /var/
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused
Mounted on
/dev/da1s1d 283737842 5397568 255641248 2% 20350 36673664 0%
/var
> See recent thread on FreeBSD Forums for context:
>
> http://www.freebsdforums.org/forums/printthread.php?t=58071
Thanks. At least I know I'm not the only one to have run into this oddity.
I'm not that knowledgeable of inodes. My understanding is they are
destroyed once a file is no longer in use. Is that correct? Is there any
sort of history kept of file system activity that would identify what
filename was identified by the inumbers listed in dmesg.today? Or is that
vain hope?
This is a 6.2 RELEASE system. (Looks like it's time to upgrade to 7.0
STABLE.)
Paul Schmehl
If it isn't already obvious,
my opinions are my own and not
those of my employer.
More information about the freebsd-questions
mailing list