Hi David, thanks for your answer!
Usually there is a housekeeping process which removes old files so there should always be enough free space. Housekeeping just did not work under certain circumstances, which should be fixed by now - so there is no high priority on this issue. I just learned that situations like this can happen even if one thinks about it before. If a full archive device was not stopping the whole LS streaming process it could compensate admin failures and make LS even more robust. I am still confused why ALSA and pulseaudio complain about missing space on the archive device, since they are only used for reading from sound card, but not for output, but as told before, this is not high priority. Best regards, Peter PS: I never would require LS to continue writing to disk, if disk is full. Currently we have two outputs: - one to stream the content to the FM transmitter station and - one to archive the streamed content to disk (required by law in Germany). There are two disks, one for running the system and a separate one used for writing archive only. The archive disk was running full, the system disk was not full and the OS itself kept running. Am 19.09.2011 08:57, schrieb David Baelde: > Hi Peter, > > First, thanks for the report and sorry for the very late reply. > Unfortunately, I don't think we can do much about it, and I'm afraid > it won't be our top priority. Most applications do not cope well with > full disk -- or even full memory. Even if we could keep running part > of the system when the disk is full, I'm not sure that a file output > should keep running when it cannot write to disk anymore, as you're > suggesting. It would be interesting to find a way to make this > behavior optional, though. > > What is important however is (1) that liquidsoap is not the cause for > the full disk and (2) that you can get enough info in the logs to > figure out the problem, and fix it. As far as I can tell, this is more > or less the case here. > > Cheers, ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1 _______________________________________________ Savonet-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/savonet-users
