On Tue, Oct 25, 2005 at 11:05:08AM -0400, Mark Grieveson wrote: > >300 MB of space would have been fine. However, before the install, I > >had over 10 (ten) GBs of space left on my 40 GB drive. Afterward, I > >was down to 1 (one) GB left; so, something went wrong somewhere. Is > >there a way to list files by filesize? A program, or command similar > >to "ls" that lists files, but sorts them in order of filesize? This > >way I could attempt to track what is causing this excessive usage of > >space. I believe the actual working install of OpenOffice.org is not, > >in and of itself, the culprit (I'm guessing that uninstalling it via > >synaptic would only free up a bit over 200 MB -- I'm basing this guess > >upon viewing the listed created debs in synaptic, and marking them for > >removal to see what synaptic would report). As always, all > >suggestion/comments appreciated. > >--Mark > > > > > > > >To sort files in the order of the size use > >du --max-depth=1 -m / | sort -g > > > >replace / with the corresponding directory. More information can be > >found in 'man du', 'man sort' > > > >raju > > > Thanks for this suggestion. This space concern happened shortly after I > installed OpenOffice.org 2.0, but that may be a co-incidence. I also > turned on a usb storage device that a friend of mine gave to me (which > had an old Windows file system on it.) I think something, for some > reason, is repeating itself (a sort of loop) within my computer > somewhere. Last night, nautilus reported that I had zero bytes (I had > had eighteen, previously.) So, I eliminated various files and programs, > freeing up 3.1 GB (I previously had not been able to read email due to > space limitations.) This morning, once again, it reported zero bytes > free. Rebooting did not change this. So again, I deleted some more stuff. > When you talk about usb device, I remember a friends machine which had a similar problem, and after much confusion we tracked the problem down to a backup script which wrote to a mount point which should always (but did not) have had a partition mounted. Thus there were _many_ things on / which didn't belong there.
Also, check /var/log/ for excessive log files... > Is there a way to check what processes are going on, so that perhaps I > could kill whichever one is screwing up my computer? Also, an hour ago > I entered the command "du --max-depth=1 -m/ | sort -g", and it's still > pondering this. > > Hth -- Andreas Rippl -- GPG messages preferred Key-ID: 0x81073379
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