[linux] Runtime journal is 27.7M, max 24.6M, 0B free.

Daniel C. von Asmuth asmuth op bakunin.xs4all.nl
Ma Aug 6 01:15:48 CEST 2018


Aldus schreef Geert Stappers op Sun, Aug 05, 2018 at 10:43:20PM +0200:
> On Sun, Aug 05, 2018 at 10:05:19PM +0200, Daniel C. von Asmuth wrote:
> > Aldus schreef Geert Stappers op Sun, Aug 05, 2018 at 07:06:16PM +0200:
> > > 
> > > Waar komt de kunstmatige bovengrens van 24.6M  vandaan??

Vader Abraham zou zeggen: "waar de smurfenhuisjes staan". 

> > 
> > Wat staat er in je /etc/systemd/journald.conf file?
> > 
> 
> stappers op ardee:/etc/systemd
> $ cat journald.conf 
> #  This file is part of systemd.
> #
> # Defaults can be restored by simply deleting this file.
> #
> # See journald.conf(5) for details.
> 
> [Journal]
> stappers op ardee:/etc/systemd
> $ 

Om een lang verhaal kort te maken: er staat niet zoveel in die file.

Dan maar een paar regels uit de man-page kopiƫren:

SystemMaxUse= and RuntimeMaxUse= control how much disk space the journal
may use up at maximum. SystemKeepFree= and RuntimeKeepFree= control how
much disk space systemd-journald shall leave free for other uses.
systemd-journald will respect both limits and use the smaller of the two
values.
 
The first pair defaults to 10% and the second to 15% of the size of the
respective file system. If the file system is nearly full and either
SystemKeepFree= or RuntimeKeepFree= is violated when systemd-journald is
started, the value will be raised to percentage that is actually free.
This means that if there was enough free space before and journal files
were created, and subsequently something else causes the file system to
fill up, journald will stop using more space, but it will not be
removing existing files to go reduce footprint either.


In de PC-Active stond dat Linux net zo moeilijk is als Windows, dus is
er een kans dat ik het ook niet weet. 

Suc6,



Daniel

-- 
	
		Geeks of a feather cruft together
		


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