Xref: utzoo comp.unix.questions:5625 comp.sys.att:2516 Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!clyde!rutgers!princeton!mccc!pjh From: pjh@mccc.UUCP (Peter J. Holsberg) Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions,comp.sys.att Subject: NO SPACE Error message Keywords: 3b2/400, SysVr3.0 Message-ID: <225@mccc.UUCP> Date: 18 Feb 88 14:59:33 GMT Organization: The College on the Other Side of US Route 1 Lines: 20 Last night in lab, I had about 12 users compiling small C programs -- maybe 30 lines each --, and I started to get "no space on disk 0 partition 0" messages. A fast df -t revealed that I had 0 blocks left in /, but another df -t some 10 seconds later showed that 350-450 blocks remained. I don't understand where in / these blocks are being used, and why -- allof a sudden, / is crowded. (My system has 3 file systems: /, /usr, and /usr2.) I'm guessing that things are happening in /tmp, right? Should I move the tmp directory to another files system? Is it possible to do that? Or is my partition 0 just "fragmented" so that an 'fsck' will take care of things? Thanks for your help. -- Peter Holsberg UUCP: {rutgers!}princeton!mccc!pjh Technology Division CompuServe: 70240,334 Mercer College GEnie: PJHOLSBERG Trenton, NJ 08690 Voice: 1-609-586-4800