On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 06:39:33PM -0500, Jerry McAllister typed:
At 07:42 AM 11/25/2003, Konrad Heuer wrote:
3) Try to identify subdirectories containing a lot of data within the
filesystem which is too small, move them by mv to a filesystem with
enough free space and
On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 06:39:33PM -0500, Jerry McAllister typed:
At 07:42 AM 11/25/2003, Konrad Heuer wrote:
3) Try to identify subdirectories containing a lot of data within the
filesystem which is too small, move them by mv to a filesystem with
enough free space
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default setting in the label
editor. I hope my terminology is correct, since I'm refering to /etc /usr
etc. Now I've installed a squid, KDE, DHCP, Java (not complete yet!),
Apache and some other stuff. While installing Qmail, I ran out of disk
space
On Tue, 25 Nov 2003, Roland Giesler wrote:
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default setting in the label
editor. I hope my terminology is correct, since I'm refering to /etc /usr
etc. Now I've installed a squid, KDE, DHCP, Java (not complete yet!),
Apache and some other stuff.
Giesler
Sent: 25 November 2003 14:17
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Resizing disk labels
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default setting in the label
editor. I hope my terminology is correct, since I'm refering to /etc /usr
etc. Now I've installed a squid, KDE, DHCP, Java
Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Konrad Heuer
Sent: 25 November 2003 14:42
To: Roland Giesler
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Resizing disk labels
On Tue, 25 Nov 2003, Roland Giesler wrote:
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default
On Tue, Nov 25, 2003 at 02:16:52PM +0200, Roland Giesler wrote:
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default setting in the label
editor. I hope my terminology is correct, since I'm refering to /etc /usr
etc. Now I've installed a squid, KDE, DHCP, Java (not complete yet!),
Apache
On Tue, 25 Nov 2003 15:03:08 +0200
Roland Giesler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks Konrad,
Yes, you're right, I mean file systems. I've only been using FreeBSD for
bit more than a month, so I'm still getting used to the different
terminology (being used to MS).
Could I do this process
On Tue, 25 Nov 2003, Roland Giesler wrote:
Yes, you're right, I mean file systems. I've only been using FreeBSD for
bit more than a month, so I'm still getting used to the different
terminology (being used to MS).
Could I do this process live, ie. could I FTP the content for /usr to
Roland Giesler [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Further to my posting, I just used KDiskFree to view die layout and it
appears that my root is full. It reports that 108% of the disk is in use,
which obvioulsy is not possible!
FAQ entry:
How is it possible for a partition to be more than 100% full?
Roland Giesler wrote:
I have installed FreeBSD in a server with the default setting
in the label
editor. I hope my terminology is correct, since I'm refering
to /etc /usr
etc. Now I've installed a squid, KDE, DHCP, Java (not complete yet!),
Apache and some other stuff. While
Thanks Konrad,
Yes, you're right, I mean file systems. I've only been using FreeBSD for
bit more than a month, so I'm still getting used to the different
terminology (being used to MS).
Could I do this process live, ie. could I FTP the content for /usr to
another machine, delete the
At 07:42 AM 11/25/2003, Konrad Heuer wrote:
3) Try to identify subdirectories containing a lot of data within the
filesystem which is too small, move them by mv to a filesystem with
enough free space and symlink them back (ln -s) to the old location.
But do not move the whole /etc
At 07:42 AM 11/25/2003, Konrad Heuer wrote:
3) Try to identify subdirectories containing a lot of data within the
filesystem which is too small, move them by mv to a filesystem with
enough free space and symlink them back (ln -s) to the old location.
But do not move the whole
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