Bash inodes: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "== Find inodes used == If you run out of inodes, it is a pita to deal with unexpectedly. In general it should not come as a suprise when this happens on servers that have man...")
 
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<metadesc>Bash inode use loop command.</metadesc>
== Find inodes used ==
== Find inodes used ==
If you run out of inodes, it is a pita to deal with unexpectedly.  In general it should not come as a suprise when this happens on servers that have many small files.  It does come as a suprise on servers like PiHole and the issue is unexpected.
If you run out of inodes, it is a pita to deal with unexpectedly.  In general it should not come as a suprise when this happens on servers that have many small files.  It does come as a suprise on servers like PiHole and the issue is unexpected.

Latest revision as of 14:59, 25 April 2024

Find inodes used

If you run out of inodes, it is a pita to deal with unexpectedly. In general it should not come as a suprise when this happens on servers that have many small files. It does come as a suprise on servers like PiHole and the issue is unexpected.

df -i will show the inode count on the mounted volumes

But to really dig into the file system and see where the hell they all are at is going to take a different command Run this against directories /var and /opt and you should find the source of the trouble soon..

for i in `find . -type d `; do echo `ls -a $i | wc -l` $i; done | sort -n