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Date:      Mon, 19 Dec 2005 07:17:12 -0600
From:      Eric Anderson <anderson@centtech.com>
To:        Lukas Ertl <le@freebsd.org>
Cc:        freebsd-fs@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: filesystem full - freebsd 5.3
Message-ID:  <43A6B2D8.8000907@centtech.com>
In-Reply-To: <20051219132739.R28071@pcle2.cc.univie.ac.at>
References:  <200512191220.jBJCKDI8037706@lurza.secnetix.de> <20051219132739.R28071@pcle2.cc.univie.ac.at>

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Lukas Ertl wrote:

> On Mon, 19 Dec 2005, Oliver Fromme wrote:
>
>> > > Perhaps more likely, he was trying to allocate full-size blocks, and
>> > > the only things available were fragments.  The output from df 
>> doesn't
>> > > distinguish between the two types of available space.  You can use
>> > > dumpfs(8) to do that.
>> >
>> > This version seems more likely for me.
>>
>> In the situation give, I think it is rather unlikely.
>
>
> We have to cope with the same problem here.  It's a 662GB filesystem 
> used for Cyrus imapd mail folders.  55GB free space, plenty of free 
> inodes, and yet we get "filesystem full" messages.  If we remove some 
> mail folders (postmaster double bounce stuff, thousands of mails per 
> dir), the kernel stops complaining about a full filesystem (until it 
> runs out of $factor_x again).
>
> We are now moving to a new machine, where we will split up the large 
> filesystem to smaller ones.


This is interesting - can you touch a new file?  Also, can you post 
(http please) your dumpfs output also? I realize it might be large.

The most interesting pieces to me are the superblock and cylindar 
summary info, plus maybe the first 100 cylindar group info.

Eric




-- 
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Eric Anderson        Sr. Systems Administrator        Centaur Technology
Anything that works is better than anything that doesn't.
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