`du -h / | grep "...M" '
will show you all files that are more than 1.0MB in size.

`find /var -type d | sed 's/.*/"&"/' | xargs du -sm | sort -g`
will do the same thing, but list them with the largest files last.

'df -h'
should show you free space, but does not always update immediatly. If
that large file doesn't exist in either of the above lists then you
shouldn't have a problem.

Consider moving your squid log to /usr/log/squid.log and symlinking it
to /var/log (assuming you have a large /usr partition)

On 5/4/06, Rodrigo Mufalani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,

  My "/var" is fully 99%, because I create one tar.gz of the squid logs.

  I was move for smbfs, then network die!!!

  I try:

  rm -rf file.tar.gz

  and don't have more free space oon the file system.


  Somebody help me?

Att,

Rodrigo Mufalani





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