Freeing Space

Problem:

Is there a way to tell the kernel to give back the free disk space now? Like a write to something in /proc/ ?

This is probably an old and very repeated theme. After hitting 0 space only noticed when my editor couldn't save source code files I have open, which to my horror now have 0 byte size in the folder listing, I went on a deleting spree.

An hour later still no free space and cannot save my precious files opened in the editor, but notice the disparity below:

# sync; df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda4 13915072 13304004 0 100% /

Any suggestions? I shut off some services/processes but not sure how to check who might be actively eating disk space.


Solution:

sudo lsof | grep "(deleted)$" | sed -re 's/^\S+\s+(\S+)\s+\S+\s+([0-9]+).*/\1\/fd\/\2/' | while read file; do sudo bash -c ": > /proc/$file"; done

Explanation:
Grep lsof output to extract only deleted files. Sed extract the process id and filedescriptor id from each line, and create a string in format {pid}/fd/{fid}. While loop and output nothing to each file, setting them to empty.
  • 2 Users Found This Useful
Was this answer helpful?

Related Articles

Installing GeoIP (PECL) on WHM

In order to install GeoIP via PECL on a WHM enabled server, you must first install 2 modules:1)...

Recommended firewall

What firewall do you recommend to secure my Linux server? MACI recommends the CSF (ConfigServer...

How to install a custom BIN on CloudLinux (with CageFS)

CageFS creates a filesystem template in /usr/share/cagefs-skeleton directory. CageFS template...

[WHM/cPanel] Changing Home directory

What is the document root? When you visit a website, you are accessing a particular folder on...