1. Come to my pc via teamviewer 11 ( not available 12+)
2. Work with putty logged in root.
3. Resolve below.
When I insert df command in putty , use% is 77% for dev/sda1
My server is almost 240GB and just used mysql database.
So do not understand why my use is so high.
Let me know the reason and if I want to delete , delete.
Hi,
I'm available to sort this out immediately. I'm an experienced sysadmin and would be happy to leverage my expertise on your project.
Best Regards,
Ralph
$25 USD en 0 día
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15 freelancers están ofertando un promedio de $25 USD por este trabajo
I can do it very quick and I can track down where your disk space has gone and show you. I'm a Linux System Administrator and Penetration Tester working remote and Freelance. I am highly experienced with any Linux Distribution and we can resolve it in a short time. I am a very good DBA, and one of my strong points is SQL and I can identify if your Database is causing you troubles and check the corresponding tables for mitigation. Thanks in advance!
Hi.. i will try to help you..
I will use this command in your root partition to know which folder that can be suspected about this matter.
du -h --max-depth=1 /
9 years of experience in server installation and maintenance..
9 years of experience in server installation and maintenance..
9 years of experience in server installation and maintenance..
I am a professional linux administrator and have great level of hand on experience in different linux operating system. I will check and resolve this issue .
Being expertise in daily work of MySQL and Linux. Ensuring to solution to your issue
The issue could be due to following reasons,
1. 5% (by default) of the filesystem is reserved for cases where the filesystem fills up to prevent serious problems. Your filesystem is full. Nothing catastrophic is happening because of the 5% buffer -- root is permitted to use that safety buffer and, in your setup, non-root users have no reason to write into that filesystem.
If you have daemons that run as a non-root user but that need to manage files in that filesystem, things will break.
2. It's possible that a process has opened a large file which has since been deleted. You'll have to kill that process to free up the space. You may be able to identify the process by using lsof. On Linux deleted yet open files are known to lsof and marked as (deleted) in lsof's output.
I Invite you to contact me and get done. Thanks