inode
Jason Henson
jason at ec.rr.com
Wed Mar 16 16:56:17 PST 2005
On 03/16/05 08:06:03, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> On 2005-03-16 13:49, Gert Cuykens <gert.cuykens at gmail.com> wrote:
> >On Wed, 16 Mar 2005 14:27:21 +0200, Giorgos Keramidas
> ><keramida at ceid.upatras.gr> wrote:
> >>
> >> Show us the output of:
> >>
> >> # df -ik
> >
> > $ df -ik
> > Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity iused ifree %iused
> Mounted on
> > /dev/ad0s1a 253678 35430 197954 15% 981 32041 3% /
> > devfs 1 1 0 100% 0 0 100%
> /dev
> > /dev/ad0s1e 253678 6 233378 0% 3 33019 0%
> /tmp
> > /dev/ad0s1f 673024 332902 286282 54% 87038 0 100%
> /usr
>
> Here you are. Your /usr partition has no free i-nodes. Probably
> because you used too large block/fragment sizes when it was newfs'd.
>
> You have two options, both of which involve a reinstallation:
>
> a) Resplit the disk giving more space to /usr.
> b) Use a single, big root partition.
>
> One possible layout, if you choose (a) could be:
>
> Filesystem Size Mount-point Other
> /dev/ad0s1a 100-200 MB / -
> /dev/ad0s1b ??? MB - (swap, tmpfs)
> /dev/ad0s1e 200-300 MB /var -
> /dev/ad0s1f rest /usr the rest of the
> disk
>
> You can then use /usr/home for the home directories of users, and
> have
> most of your space in /usr (where it is needed).
>
Maybe you could do 100-200MB for / and /var. Here is my system:
$ df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/ad0s2a 248M 66M 162M 29% /
devfs 1.0K 1.0K 0B 100% /dev
/dev/ad0s2e 248M 21M 207M 9% /tmp
/dev/ad0s2f 27G 19G 5.4G 78% /usr
/dev/ad0s2d 248M 40M 188M 17% /var
/dev/ad0s1 8.0G 7.9G 153M 98% /usr/ntfs
$
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