Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-04 Thread Samuel Sieb

On 4/3/19 8:12 PM, home user via users wrote:
The results above do raise a question in my mind:  What are those 
"[user's home]/.local/share/tracker/tracker-miner-fs.log"
files?  Anything to do with coin or data mining, or something else 
malicious?


Tracker is a service that indexes your files so you can easily search 
for them by name and content.

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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-04 Thread David Dusanic

home user via users:

Good evening,

I recall that a few years ago, I somehow checked my Fedora system for disk 
fragmentation.  I also think the tool came with Fedora; i did not have to 
install it separately.  Now, I don't recall the name of the tool that did that. 
 Nor can I find any tool to do that.  How do I check my F-28 system for disk 
fragmentation?

thanks,
Bill.


I really do not see any need to defrag a Linux system. The file system 
itself already takes care of everything.


--
David Dusanic
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-04 Thread Ed Greshko
On 4/4/19 11:53 PM, home user via users wrote:
> (Ed wrote)
> > These are produced by the "tracker" packages.
> > I, personally, couldn't find a need for them so I erased them
> > quite some time ago.
>
> I assume you deleted the files, not the packages.  Mine were dated 2013, so I 
> deleted them.

I should have been specific.

I did do "dnf erase tracker*"  as it was an easier way to ensure the daemons 
wouldn't run
for any user.

>
> > Do a "dnf info tracker" and "dnf info traker-miners" for
> > more info on what they do.
>
> That gave me a rough idea.  Doesn't sound like anything I have wanted or do 
> want.  But I
> can't predict the future, so I'm keeping the packages.
>
> Thank-you, Ed.


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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-04 Thread home user via users

(Ed wrote)
> These are produced by the "tracker" packages.
> I, personally, couldn't find a need for them so I erased them
> quite some time ago.

I assume you deleted the files, not the packages.  Mine were dated 2013, 
so I deleted them.


> Do a "dnf info tracker" and "dnf info traker-miners" for
> more info on what they do.

That gave me a rough idea.  Doesn't sound like anything I have wanted or 
do want.  But I can't predict the future, so I'm keeping the packages.


Thank-you, Ed.
Bill.
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-04 Thread home user via users

(Samuel wrote)
> There was a program called "e2defrag", but it was for ext2 only.
> e2fsck will give you a fragmentation percent at the end. Just
> don't forget the "-n" unless the partition is not mounted!

I done it.
-
-bash.5[~]: e2fsck -nf [partition]
e2fsck 1.44.2 (14-May-2018)
Warning!  [partition] is mounted.
Warning: skipping journal recovery because doing a read-only filesystem 
check.

Pass 1: Checking inodes, blocks, and sizes
Deleted inode 52428804 has zero dtime.  Fix? no

Inodes that were part of a corrupted orphan linked list found.  Fix? no

Inode 52429073 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Inode 52429167 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Inode 52429328 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Inode 52431131 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Inode 52431332 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Inode 52431496 was part of the orphaned inode list.  IGNORED.
Pass 2: Checking directory structure
Pass 3: Checking directory connectivity
Pass 4: Checking reference counts
Pass 5: Checking group summary information
Block bitmap differences:  -33824 -(209757912--209757923) 
-(209759858--209759869) -(209766298--209766309) -(210052344--210052355) 
-(210616843--210616854) -(211515401--211515412)

Fix? no

Free blocks count wrong (235056406, counted=235055939).
Fix? no

Inode bitmap differences:  -52428804 -52429073 -52429167 -52429328 
-52431131 -52431332 -52431496

Fix? no

Free inodes count wrong (60127490, counted=60127428).
Fix? no


[partition]: ** WARNING: Filesystem still has errors **

[partition]: 59134/60186624 files (1.7% non-contiguous), 
5659882/240716288 blocks

-bash.6[~]:
-
(hopefully, I got the right partition!)  I gather the "1.7% 
non-contiguous" is what relates to fragmentation.


This does raise a few questions, but I'll deal with those late this 
month, in a separate thread, after I upgrade to F-29.


Thank-you, Samuel.
Bill.
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread home user via users

(Samuel wrote)
> There was a program called "e2defrag", but it was for ext2 only.
> e2fsck will give you a fragmentation percent at the end. Just
> don't forget the "-n" unless the partition is not mounted!
> ...

I saw this after tagging the thread "SOLVED".  But for continuing 
education, I'll give this a try tomorrow morning.


Thank-you, Samuel.
Bill.
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-03 Thread Ed Greshko
On 4/4/19 11:12 AM, home user via users wrote:
> The results above do raise a question in my mind:  What are those
> "[user's home]/.local/share/tracker/tracker-miner-fs.log"
> files?  Anything to do with coin or data mining, or something else malicious? 

These are produced by the "tracker" packages.

I, personally, couldn't find a need for them so I erased them quite some time 
ago.

Do a "dnf info tracker" and "dnf info traker-miners" for more info on what they 
do.


-- 
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color scheme
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation? [SOLVED]

2019-04-03 Thread home user via users

(Joe wrote)
> You don't. The ext2/3/4 file systems are designed to minimize
> fragmentation, ...

Not what I expected.  But I like it!

Recently, I've been moving a lot of files and sub-directories around. 
And I'm preparing for a semi-annual big back-up and system upgrade (to 
F-29).  Because it has been a few years since I last checked for 
fragmentation, I thought it would be good to at least check.


A few minutes ago, based on Ed's reply, I tried "e4defrag -c" on "/home":
-
e4defrag 1.44.2 (14-May-2018)
 now/best   size/ext
1. [user1's home]/.ICEauthority  30/1  4 KB
2. [user1's home]/.local/share/tracker/tracker-miner-fs.log
12/1  4 KB
3. [user2's 
home]/.nv/GLCache/e0ac323390458da3db161114e73bf39c/89ca161336d63803/c6eb5423ccd49d57.toc

11/1  4 KB
4. [user2's home]/.local/share/tracker/tracker-miner-fs.log
29/1  4 KB
5. [user2's 
home]/.nv/GLCache/1518083e014283666145392811bca1e8/4c4d90067ea0e5dc/c6eb5423ccd49d57.toc

 9/1  4 KB

 Total/best extents 55461/52910
 Average size per extent131 KB
 Fragmentation score1
 [0-30 no problem: 31-55 a little bit fragmented: 56- needs defrag]
 This directory (/home) does not need defragmentation.
 Done.
-bash.2[~]:
-
So it looks great.

The results above do raise a question in my mind:  What are those 
"[user's home]/.local/share/tracker/tracker-miner-fs.log"
files?  Anything to do with coin or data mining, or something else 
malicious?


Thank-you, Joe and Ed.
Bill.
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread home user via users

(Ed wrote)
> You could be thinking of e4defrag?

I vaguely recall it being a GUI tool.  But it's a vague memory.  I did a 
"man" on e4defrag.  That should work.


Thank-you, Ed.
Bill.
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread Samuel Sieb

On 4/3/19 6:45 PM, home user via users wrote:

Mike wrote
 > I don't know of any defragmentation tool. Are you maybe thinking of
 > "fsck"? It's a program to check the health of the filesystem and
 > recover any lost bits, etc.

No.  It was definitely a tool that included fragmentation checking and 
defragmentation functionality.


There was a program called "e2defrag", but it was for ext2 only.  e2fsck 
will give you a fragmentation percent at the end.  Just don't forget the 
"-n" unless the partition is not mounted!


# e2fsck -nf /dev/sda2
[skip lots of invalid output]
root: 764635/5242880 files (0.2% non-contiguous), 18993872/20971520 blocks
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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread Ed Greshko
On 4/4/19 9:45 AM, home user via users wrote:
> Mike wrote
> > I don't know of any defragmentation tool. Are you maybe thinking of
> > "fsck"? It's a program to check the health of the filesystem and
> > recover any lost bits, etc.
>
> No.  It was definitely a tool that included fragmentation checking and 
> defragmentation
> functionality.

You could be thinking of e4defrag?


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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread home user via users

Mike wrote
> I don't know of any defragmentation tool. Are you maybe thinking of
> "fsck"? It's a program to check the health of the filesystem and
> recover any lost bits, etc.

No.  It was definitely a tool that included fragmentation checking and 
defragmentation functionality.

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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread Joe Zeff

On 04/03/2019 07:28 PM, home user via users wrote:

I recall that a few years ago, I somehow checked my Fedora system for disk 
fragmentation.  I also think the tool came with Fedora; i did not have to 
install it separately.  Now, I don't recall the name of the tool that did that. 
 Nor can I find any tool to do that.  How do I check my F-28 system for disk 
fragmentation?


You don't.  The ext2/3/4 file systems are designed to minimize 
fragmentation, and one of the worst things you can do is defrag your 
system because that will just cause constant fragmentation.  In fact, 
the best way to defrag if you really really have to is by backing up, 
reformatting and restoring your system.

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Re: how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread Mike Wright

On 4/3/19 6:28 PM, home user via users wrote:

Good evening,

I recall that a few years ago, I somehow checked my Fedora system for disk 
fragmentation.  I also think the tool came with Fedora; i did not have to 
install it separately.  Now, I don't recall the name of the tool that did that. 
 Nor can I find any tool to do that.  How do I check my F-28 system for disk 
fragmentation?


Hi Bill,

I don't know of any defragmentation tool.  Are you maybe thinking of 
"fsck"?  It's a program to check the health of the filesystem and 
recover any lost bits, etc.

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how to check for disk fragmentation?

2019-04-03 Thread home user via users
Good evening,

I recall that a few years ago, I somehow checked my Fedora system for disk 
fragmentation.  I also think the tool came with Fedora; i did not have to 
install it separately.  Now, I don't recall the name of the tool that did that. 
 Nor can I find any tool to do that.  How do I check my F-28 system for disk 
fragmentation?

thanks,
Bill.
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