Help, I think my file system is full, I created to many website backups and I need to delete all but last backup, how can th8s be accomplished through terminal. I can't connect to any site or ispconfig jnsflooringandsupplies.com
Looks like your database shutdown operating already, do not reboot. Depending what's more worthy delete old log files in /var/log rm *.gz rm *.1 and sure enough you can delete backups manually aswell. just need to make ISPConfig aware after the fact, maybe though you can fake the files touch filename.tar.gz would create an empty file, I'd try "touching" those files you deleted. If you are lucky, database operation starts automatically again, or at least can be shutdown in a save manner.
I already rebooted, wish I didn't. Before reboot I was able to see other sites, including ispconfig, I tried to do a restore when store manager did a computer restart,, now can't see any sites. Last thing computer did was do a backup which is set for 30 backups. Last night before this morning itworked
hope you do have some external storage where you could put some data on. If you are lucky, depending on your configuration, after space is available, you might have lost a certain amount of data but might be able to recover after some space has been freed. As the strategy on how to resolve incidients like that is nothing you can pull off a handbook but have to plan for yourself, can't really tell you how to proceed. If you enabled binlog on your database, it might be tempting to free up some space using that but this can/will lead to issues. If you have though, and the database is irecoverable, one could use them to try to extract data. Unfortunally if you rely on mysqldump it won't be a pretty result for sure :/ Might be goot to seek for professional help depending on how worthy the data is.
I got this phpMyAdmin - Error Error during session start; please check your PHP and/or webserver log file and configure your PHP installation properly. Also ensure that cookies are enabled in your browser. session_write_close(): write failed: No space left on device (28) session_write_close(): Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/var/lib/php/sessions)
ssh does work even if you do not have disk space left. php sessions are, at least by default, saved on disk. If you have partitions or you are not sure what is full ( well /var for sure ) du -h << plain wrong / typo ; check @Taleman 's post below that's why I suggested moving data to external drive if possible ( always better than deleting ) /var/log may not free up much but maybe just enough to get to the next steps if not locate backups you can sacrifice
These commands should show what is full: Code: df -hT df -hi If for example /var is full or maybe root / is full, find out what uses most disk space: Code: cd /var du -shc * | sort -h Then free space, by deleting oldest log files for example, or some other stuff not needed or that can be restored from backups. You can copy the data to somewhere else for safe keeping, if it is too valuable to be deleted. You should start monitoring disk space regularly. Maybe install logwatch and set it to e-mail you the report daily, report shows disk usage among other things.
when trying to login to phpmyadmin i get this mysqli_real_connect(): (HY000/2002): No such file or directory and Connection for controluser as defined in your configuration failed.
i deleted all website backups and this is what it looks like now df -hT Code: Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on udev devtmpfs 7.8G 0 7.8G 0% /dev tmpfs tmpfs 1.6G 1.5M 1.6G 1% /run /dev/nvme0n1p2 ext4 915G 76G 794G 9% / tmpfs tmpfs 7.8G 0 7.8G 0% /dev/shm tmpfs tmpfs 5.0M 4.0K 5.0M 1% /run/lock tmpfs tmpfs 7.8G 0 7.8G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup /dev/nvme0n1p1 vfat 1.1G 6.1M 1.1G 1% /boot/efi /dev/loop0 squashfs 64M 64M 0 100% /snap/core20/1828 /dev/loop2 squashfs 50M 50M 0 100% /snap/snapd/18357 /dev/loop1 squashfs 92M 92M 0 100% /snap/lxd/24061 tmpfs tmpfs 1.6G 0 1.6G 0% /run/user/1000 df -hi Code: Filesystem Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on udev 2.0M 554 2.0M 1% /dev tmpfs 2.0M 972 2.0M 1% /run /dev/nvme0n1p2 59M 500K 58M 1% / tmpfs 2.0M 1 2.0M 1% /dev/shm tmpfs 2.0M 9 2.0M 1% /run/lock tmpfs 2.0M 18 2.0M 1% /sys/fs/cgroup /dev/nvme0n1p1 0 0 0 - /boot/efi /dev/loop0 12K 12K 0 100% /snap/core20/1828 /dev/loop2 496 496 0 100% /snap/snapd/18357 /dev/loop1 815 815 0 100% /snap/lxd/24061 tmpfs 2.0M 21 2.0M 1% /run/user/1000
Code: root@computer-hosting:/var# du -shc * | sort -h 0 lock 0 run 4.0K local 4.0K opt 48K snap 76K tmp 632K mail 1.2M crash 3.1M spool 3.3M backups 50M backup 142M cache 1.9G vmail 2.4G lib 5.2G log 57G www 67G total
disk usage is fine. snap packages are unusual but 100% is fine for those mounts, do not worry. you need to restart your database server again, likely $ systemctl restart mysql should also work for mariadb up to a point. Before you do that however, as you have enough space, make a copy of your database data. Default would be in /var/lib/mysql ( verify ) you could do $ cd /var/lib/ $ cp -pR mysql mysql_broken and now try to start the database. Depending on errors or not decide what to do next. $ journalctl -u mariadb -f $ tail -f /var/log/syslog | grep mysql or /var/log/mysql/error.log there are various configurations out there. If you can't find the error log / output, you could aso try starting mariadb / mysql in foreground using $ mysqld_safe if you think something went wrong, need something to fix / do any force recovery, it is good you have the "broken backup"
Logs begin at Thu 2024-05-16 04:20:58 UTC. -- May 20 23:43:56 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: mariadb.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'. May 20 23:43:56 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: Failed to start MariaDB 10.3.39 database server. May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: Starting MariaDB 10.3.39 database server... May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com sh[7356]: [108B blob data] May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com sh[7356]: Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com mysqld[7359]: [98B blob data] May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com mysqld[7359]: Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: mariadb.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: mariadb.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'. May 20 23:44:25 computer-hosting.com systemd[1]: Failed to start MariaDB 10.3.39 database server.
May 21 00:19:07 computer-hosting dovecot: auth-worker: Error: Can't read dir of '/etc/mysql/conf.d/' (OS errno 2 - No such file or directory) May 21 00:19:07 computer-hosting dovecot: auth-worker: Error: [ERROR] Stopped processing the 'includedir' directive in file /etc/mysql/my.cnf at line 22. May 21 00:19:07 computer-hosting dovecot: auth-worker(9938): Error: mysql(localhost): Connect failed to database (dbispconfig): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock' (2) - waiting for 25 seconds before retry
root@computer-hosting:~# mysqld_safe /usr/bin/my_print_defaults: Can't read dir of '/etc/mysql/conf.d/' (Errcode: 2 "No such file or directory") Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted /usr/bin/my_print_defaults: Can't read dir of '/etc/mysql/conf.d/' (Errcode: 2 "No such file or directory") Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted 240521 00:21:54 mysqld_safe Logging to '/var/lib/mysql/computer-hosting.com.err'. 240521 00:21:54 mysqld_safe Starting mysqld daemon with databases from /var/lib/mysql
please examine the mentioned log /var/lib/mysql/computer-hosting.com.err but other than that, you have a ( temporarily ) running mysql server and at first glance it is looking good. Not sure why the "Error Can't read..." message is from dovecot though. Have a look at ls -l /etc/mysql there may be some mariadb files or folders, the my.cnf is there, so that's good. Nothing to worry, some folders may be referenced as include dir but are not required. Especially transission folders from mysql to mariadb renaming. after you stopped the mysqld_safe process ( go to another shell and use $ mysql -e 'SHUTDOWN' or follow this procedure https://www.percona.com/blog/prepare-mysql-for-a-safe-shutdown/ depending on your setup. You should be able to connect to your database now, and probably be able to systemctl start mariadb
root@computer-hosting:/var/lib# mysql -e 'SHUTDOWN' mysql: Can't read dir of '/etc/mysql/conf.d/' (Errcode: 2 "No such file or directory") Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted
root@computer-hosting:/var/lib# systemctl start mariadb Job for mariadb.service failed because the control process exited with error code. See "systemctl status mariadb.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.
40521 00:21:54 mysqld_safe Starting mysqld daemon with databases from /var/lib/mysql ^G/usr/sbin/mysqld: Can't read dir of '/etc/mysql/conf.d/' (Errcode: 2 "No such file or directory") Fatal error in defaults handling. Program aborted 240521 00:21:54 mysqld_safe mysqld from pid file /var/lib/mysql/computer-hosting.com.pid ended