I have a Ubuntu 18.04 droplet running some docker containers. I added a single volume, and after “some amount of time” (as yet unknown) I get “No space left on device” trying to write to it.
if I cd to the mount point and do a ‘touch’ I get the same message. rebooting the droplet makes it work again.
fstab is: /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-0DO_Volume_dockervol2 /mnt/dockervol2 ext4 defaults,nofail,discard 0 0
anyone come across something similar?
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Hi @neil2609d7b023c26027079ecc,
It does seems like you don’t have enough space on your Volume. You can check that by typing:
- df -h
The output would look something like this:
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev 2.0G 0 2.0G 0% /dev
tmpfs 395M 1.8M 393M 1% /run
/dev/vda1 25G 20G 4.4G 82% /
In my case I am using 20G out of 25GB available for my root partition. Basically, the df command reports the file system disk space usage.
df -i
sudo find / -type f -size +500M -exec ls -lh {} \;
Depending on the size of your disk, the command might take a while to complete. You can then go ahead and delete any of the large files that you do not need.
du command which estimates the file space usage:du -h --max-depth=1 /
For example:
root@test-droplet:~$ cd /home/
root@test-droplet:/home$ du -h --max-depth=1
16K ./testuser
28K ./user
16K ./root
1.8G ./user2
5.0G ./test-droplet
7.1G .
Then we can cd into the largest folder and run the command again:
root@test-droplet:/home$ cd test-droplet/
root@test-droplet:/home/test-droplet$ du -h --max-depth=1
76K ./.npm
4.0K ./script
5.0G ./public_html
12K ./.ssh
5.0G .
We would need to do that a few more times until we get to the folder that is using those 5GB.
Note: if you have a database service like MySQL, make sure Not to delete any files manually from the MySQL folder. This would cause issues with your database.
If you are unable to clear any disk space I would recommend upgrading your Droplet.
Lastly, I believe in your case it can be due to high inode usage so do not forget to check the df -i command.
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