One of my linux boxes ran out of disk space, which surprised me, because it definitely didn’t have that much stuff on it. When I check with df
it says I have used 212GB on my / path:
$ df -h /
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda1 227G 212G 5.2G 98% /
So, I tried to use du
to see if maybe a runaway log file was the cause, but this says I have only used 101GB on my / path (this is also more in-line with how much space I expected to be used):
$ du -h | sort -h
...
101G /
Using those commands with sudo
outputs the same sizes.
My filesystem is Btrfs, I’ve tried the suggestion to use btrfs balance start ...
but this actually INCREASED my disk usage to 99% lol
So my question is… what on earth is using the remaining 111GB?? Why can I not see it in du
?
I typically investigate with
ncdu
which gives very useful visualization like :and let’s you iterate. Here for example you’d go into
platformio
and get another view, pressd
to delete files or directories that aren’t needed anymore if it’s a stale project e.g.node_modules
. Go back, etc.So yes, warmly recommended, both on desktop and remote servers. It’s way easier IMHO that
du -sh ./directory
thencd
, rinse and repeat. It’s also way WAY faster then GUI equivalents … because you navigate and take action, e.g. delete, with your keyboard.All that being said, if it’s about your filesystem rather than your files, it probably won’t help much. I don’t know enough about btrfs to help unfortunately.
Oh this one is very cool! Unfortunately it also only shows the same 101GB being used:
ncdu 1.22 ~ Use the arrow keys to navigate, press ? for help --- / ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 93.1 GiB [###########################] /home 6.5 GiB [# ] /usr 790.4 MiB [ ] /var 173.0 MiB [ ] /boot 12.8 MiB [ ] /etc 1.7 MiB [ ] /root 1.3 MiB [ ] /run 44.0 KiB [ ] /tmp @ 4.0 KiB [ ] initrd.img.old @ 4.0 KiB [ ] initrd.img @ 4.0 KiB [ ] vmlinuz.old @ 4.0 KiB [ ] vmlinuz @ 4.0 KiB [ ] lib64 @ 4.0 KiB [ ] sbin @ 4.0 KiB [ ] lib @ 4.0 KiB [ ] bin . 0.0 B [ ] /proc 0.0 B [ ] /sys 0.0 B [ ] /dev 0.0 B [ ] /media e 0.0 B [ ] /srv e 0.0 B [ ] /opt e 0.0 B [ ] /mnt