You can also use "ncdu". Man Page says: ncdu (NCurses Disk Usage) is a curses-based version of the well-known 'du', and provides a fast way to see what directories are using your disk space.
Am 19.04.2013 13:55, schrieb Raffaele Morelli: > 2013/4/19 Darac Marjal <mailingl...@darac.org.uk> > >> On Fri, Apr 19, 2013 at 01:32:45PM +0200, Raffaele Morelli wrote: >>> Hi, >>> I have a debian wheezy server up, I would like to free some space on >>> rootfs but can't guess how... >>> Here follows the filesystem, any hints? >> You have 213Mb in your root file system, that seems fairly small to me >> (especially as you have 477Gb kicking around free in your /home, but >> that's not what you asked) >> > it's a quite long story to tell but that's the result... > > >> Try "sudo du -ahx / | sort -h" to get a listing of file and directory >> sizes on that partition. Maybe it can give you some clue as to where to >> trim. >> > debian:~# du -ahx /dev/mapper/debian-root | sort -h > 0 /dev/mapper/debian-root > > /r > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/5171327e.3070...@arcor.de