I've logged in to my Win7 machine this morning to find my Samba shares are unaccessible. After some investigation I've found that the root disk on my headless Debian server has 0% free space. I know for a fact I had around 5GB of free space yesterday so I'm a bit confused.
I'm a bit of a newcomer to command line Linux (this is my first headless server) and I've spent the last hour and a half going through various articles on the net trying to find what is using all the space but I'm not getting anywhere. I've used various du commands but I just can't find anything that has used all this space.
The only change I made yesterday was to move my backup mount (which was on the root disk) to a newly installed disk. To do this, I renamed the old directory, created a new directory and amended fstab to point to the new disk and directory and removed the old entry. I tested my backups last night and they all went onto the new disk as expected. However, the /backups directory is not getting mounted now. Is this becaus of the lack of space on root?
So, can anyone advise on how I can find what is using all this space?
Thanks
I'm a bit of a newcomer to command line Linux (this is my first headless server) and I've spent the last hour and a half going through various articles on the net trying to find what is using all the space but I'm not getting anywhere. I've used various du commands but I just can't find anything that has used all this space.
The only change I made yesterday was to move my backup mount (which was on the root disk) to a newly installed disk. To do this, I renamed the old directory, created a new directory and amended fstab to point to the new disk and directory and removed the old entry. I tested my backups last night and they all went onto the new disk as expected. However, the /backups directory is not getting mounted now. Is this becaus of the lack of space on root?
So, can anyone advise on how I can find what is using all this space?
Thanks