On Fri, 2010-02-12 at 15:40 -0800, Suvayu Ali wrote: > On Friday 12 February 2010 09:19 AM, Mikkel wrote: > > On 02/12/2010 09:29 AM, Bruno Wolff III wrote: > >> > >> lsof would allow you to find the processes that have the files open. And then > >> you could kill those processes to release the space. It looks like you should > >> be able to get size infomation of these files from lsof as well. So one > >> could script looking for processes that have large files open. > > > > You might want to try using the +L1 and the -s options. It will > > display the sizes of unlinked (deleted) files. > > > > lsof +L1 -s > > I am not entirely clear about this part, how does one end up with an > un-named open file. To simulate the situation I tried to open a text > file with an editor and then removed it with rm. But it doesn't show up > in `lsof +L1' as I was expecting it to. Am I understanding this the > wrong way? Editors can do funny things with backup files in the interests of preserving your work. An easier test would be: cat > foo & rm foo lsof +L1 -s When I do this the "cat" process shows up (and foo is marked as deleted). You can then reconnect to "cat" (using fg) and write stuff into the "non-existent" file. poc -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines