This has happened twice now. After coming back to my computer after leaving it idle for a few hours, Mint tells me that my primary disk is almost full. The system shows that my home folder is taking up almost 200GB of space, but I don't have nearly that much data on the drive. Upon further inception, none of my subfolders in /home have more that 6GB of data in them. This points to a possible culprit being an expanding file. However, i don't know which file it could be. After I reboot my computer, the disk shows the proper data amount.
Content of home folder:
.bash_history
.bash_logout
.bashrc.dpk-dist
.conkyrc
.dmrc
.esd_auth
.face
.gksu.lock
.gtk-bookmarks
.ICEauthority
.nvidia-settings-rc
.profile
.pulse-cookie
.Xauthority
.xsession-errors
LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
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LMDE 2 has reached end of support as of 1-1-2019
LMDE 2 has reached end of support as of 1-1-2019
LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
I don't remember now if that graphical application allows it, but you could try "digging in" down the subfolders til you pin down the concerning file...?
Or run, in a terminal:Which would look for files bigger than 10GB in your home folder. You can change your file-size settings for find with the help below:
From 'man find':And from the same man page:
Or run, in a terminal:
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find $HOME -size +10G
From 'man find':
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Numeric arguments can be specified as
+n for greater than n,
-n for less than n,
n for exactly n.
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-size n[cwbkMG]
File uses n units of space. The following suffixes can be used:
`b' for 512-byte blocks (this is the default if no suffix is used)
`c' for bytes
`w' for two-byte words
`k' for Kilobytes (units of 1024 bytes)
`M' for Megabytes (units of 1048576 bytes)
`G' for Gigabytes (units of 1073741824 bytes)
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
Is it only that disk utility that tells you so? How about other programs? What Nautilus/Nemo/Caja (whatever file manager you use) says? What would "df -h" in the console say?whytheam wrote:Mint tells me that my primary disk is almost full.
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
I receive a notification from Cinnamon, Nemo shows the disk almost being full, my conky shows the disk at 90%+, and the Disk Usage Analyzer shows the disk being full. Tonight I'm going to leave my computer idle and see if I can recreate the problem for a third time. I will report back if successful.
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
Try "df -h" in the console too.
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
and if you then want to identify the largest files, try something likeMonsta wrote:Try "df -h" in the console too. :)
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DEPTH=3
ls -alhS $(find -maxdepth ${DEPTH} -type f 2> /dev/null) 2> /dev/null | head
To see errors, remove the '2> /dev/null'.
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
It just happened again. It's my .xsesson-errors file that's exploding. All the errors are similar to this:
I think someone's trying to work their way into my world...
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31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM rfbAuthPasswordChecked: password check failed
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM [IPv4] Got connection from client 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM other clients:
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM 204.51.97.213
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM Client Protocol Version 3.4
31/07/2013 07:21:46 PM Ignoring minor version mismatch
** (vino-server:3621): WARNING **: Deferring authentication of '204.51.97.213' for 5 seconds
** (vino-server:3621): WARNING **: VNC authentication failure from '204.51.97.213'
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
Wow. So the disk actually gets full after all, and it does so because someone tries to bruteforce your system and the log file grows... wait, grows to 200 Gb?
Re: LMDE believes disk is full when it isn't
If your computer is not either behind a router or protected by a firewall, you are indeed offering a vnc access (shared desktop) to it from anywhere on the Internet. You should completely disable this kind of remote access to your computer if you actually never use it for your own needs (and then choose a very strong password if you do use this).