Dwayne C . Litzenberger wrote:
Okay, I'm back and running, and I figured out my problem. ext2 filesystems
have reserved blocks, though I don't know what they're for. It seems only
root can access them, although I haven't really checked this. tune2fs can
lower the number of reserved blocks,
On Sat, Oct 16, 1999 at 03:57:39PM -0600, Dwayne C . Litzenberger wrote:
Okay, I'm back and running, and I figured out my problem. ext2 filesystems
have reserved blocks, though I don't know what they're for. It seems only
root can access them, although I haven't really checked this. tune2fs
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Jean-Yves BARBIER [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sat, Oct 16, 1999 at 03:57:39PM -0600, Dwayne C . Litzenberger wrote:
Okay, I'm back and running, and I figured out my problem. ext2 filesystems
have reserved blocks, though I don't know what they're for. It seems only
*Please cc replies to [EMAIL PROTECTED], as I cannot
access my mail e-mail account.*
Here's my problem: no matter how much I delete, my
free space count is 0 blocks. e2fsck doesn't help.
When I run df, it knows that the blocks used is less
than blocks free, and blocks used gets smaller as I
Okay, I'm back and running, and I figured out my problem. ext2 filesystems
have reserved blocks, though I don't know what they're for. It seems only
root can access them, although I haven't really checked this. tune2fs can
lower the number of reserved blocks, but here's my question:
Why, on a
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