357

I have a disk drive where the inode usage is 100% (using df -i command). However after deleting files substantially, the usage remains 100%.

What's the correct way to do it then?

How is it possible that a disk drive with less disk space usage can have higher Inode usage than disk drive with higher disk space usage?

Is it possible if I zip lot of files would that reduce the used inode count?

7
  • 9
    Want to give you 50 points for this question. How can I do! :)
    – Sophy
    Feb 18, 2016 at 9:22
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    @StevenLu Thank you for your info! I want to give credit to him because i spent a few days to solve my issue. But this issue can help me. Thank again,
    – Sophy
    Oct 17, 2016 at 8:43
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    @Sophy : why award something off-topic for SO? :) That's definitely not a programming question, no matter how many upvotes it gets.
    – tink
    Sep 17, 2017 at 18:08
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    Empty directories also consume inodes. Deleting them can free up some inodes. The number can be significant in some use-cases. You can delete empty directories with: find . -type d -empty -delete Jun 22, 2018 at 9:02
  • 1
    Helpfull, but I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because this seem belong to unix.stackexchange.com Sep 2, 2019 at 7:37

21 Answers 21

249

If you are very unlucky you have used about 100% of all inodes and can't create the scipt. You can check this with df -ih.

Then this bash command may help you:

sudo find . -xdev -type f | cut -d "/" -f 2 | sort | uniq -c | sort -n

And yes, this will take time, but you can locate the directory with the most files.

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    that does the trick. my problem was to have an incredible amount of sessions in the /lib/php/sessions directory. maybe somebody has the same problem
    – SteMa
    May 22, 2012 at 14:51
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    Someone should rewrite this find, cut, uniq sort into a single awk command!
    – mogsie
    Oct 15, 2012 at 17:14
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    @alxndr awk could keep a hash of the directory and the count of files without uniqing and sorting a gazillion lines. That said, perhaps here's an improvement: find . -maxdepth 1 -type d | grep -v '^\.$' | xargs -n 1 -i{} find {} -xdev -type f | cut -d "/" -f 2 | uniq -c | sort -n — this only sorts the last list.
    – mogsie
    Mar 7, 2013 at 13:05
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    If you cannot create any files, even that can fail because sort may fail to keep everything in the memory and will try to automatically fall back to writing a temporary file. A process which would obviously fail... Mar 8, 2013 at 7:59
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    sort failed for me, but I was able to give --buffer-size=10G which worked. Aug 21, 2014 at 15:42
195

It's quite easy for a disk to have a large number of inodes used even if the disk is not very full.

An inode is allocated to a file so, if you have gazillions of files, all 1 byte each, you'll run out of inodes long before you run out of disk.

It's also possible that deleting files will not reduce the inode count if the files have multiple hard links. As I said, inodes belong to the file, not the directory entry. If a file has two directory entries linked to it, deleting one will not free the inode.

Additionally, you can delete a directory entry but, if a running process still has the file open, the inode won't be freed.

My initial advice would be to delete all the files you can, then reboot the box to ensure no processes are left holding the files open.

If you do that and you still have a problem, let us know.

By the way, if you're looking for the directories that contain lots of files, this script may help:

#!/bin/bash

# count_em - count files in all subdirectories under current directory.
echo 'echo $(ls -a "$1" | wc -l) $1' >/tmp/count_em_$$
chmod 700 /tmp/count_em_$$
find . -mount -type d -print0 | xargs -0 -n1 /tmp/count_em_$$ | sort -n
rm -f /tmp/count_em_$$
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    Of course, the >/tmp/count_em_$$ will only work if you have space for it... if that's the case, see @simon's answer.
    – alxndr
    Dec 5, 2012 at 21:52
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    @alxndr, that's why it's often a good idea to keep your file systems separate - that way, filling up something like /tmp won't affect your other file systems.
    – paxdiablo
    Dec 5, 2012 at 23:09
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    @AshishKarpe, I assume you're talking about your own situation since the OP made no mention of production servers. If you can't reboot immedaitely then there are two possibilities. First, hope that the processes in flight eventually close the current files so disk resources can be freed up. Second, even production servers should have scope for rebooting at some point - simply schedule some planned downtime or wait for the next window of downtime to come up.
    – paxdiablo
    Jan 18, 2016 at 5:12
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    So grateful for this post. I had a RHEL 6.3 server that had all partitions free but thanks to the count_em script I was able to see the inodes in the /var partition were all used up, thanks to some weird cache files filling up /var/lib/sss/db directory . All my applications including auditd, lvm were screaming no space left. Now on to the REAL problems... :-(
    – Unpossible
    Mar 26, 2016 at 16:27
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    I suppose you want ls -A instead of ls -a. Why would you want to count . and ..?
    – jarno
    Aug 17, 2016 at 11:47
77

My situation was that I was out of inodes and I had already deleted about everything I could.

$ df -i
Filesystem     Inodes  IUsed  IFree IUse% Mounted on
/dev/sda1      942080 507361     11  100% /

I am on an ubuntu 12.04LTS and could not remove the old linux kernels which took up about 400,000 inodes because apt was broken because of a missing package. And I couldn't install the new package because I was out of inodes so I was stuck.

I ended up deleting a few old linux kernels by hand to free up about 10,000 inodes

$ sudo rm -rf /usr/src/linux-headers-3.2.0-2*

This was enough to then let me install the missing package and fix my apt

$ sudo apt-get install linux-headers-3.2.0-76-generic-pae

and then remove the rest of the old linux kernels with apt

$ sudo apt-get autoremove

things are much better now

$ df -i
Filesystem     Inodes  IUsed  IFree IUse% Mounted on
/dev/sda1      942080 507361 434719   54% /
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    This was the closest to my own approach in a similar situation. It's worth noting that a more cautious approach is well documented at help.ubuntu.com/community/Lubuntu/Documentation/…
    – beldaz
    Jun 20, 2016 at 1:00
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    My case exactly! But had to use "sudo apt-get autoremove -f" to progress
    – tonysepia
    Oct 20, 2017 at 11:50
  • Is it safe to do this: sudo rm -rf /usr/src/linux-headers-3.2.0-2*, if I am sure I am not using that kernel?
    – Mars Lee
    Aug 28, 2018 at 20:50
  • @MarsLee You can check which kernel is currently running with "uname -a" Aug 30, 2018 at 7:44
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    Calling $ sudo apt-get autoremove alone, did the trick for me. Sep 27, 2019 at 9:18
66

My solution:

Try to find if this is an inodes problem with:

df -ih

Try to find root folders with large inodes count:

for i in /*; do echo $i; find $i |wc -l; done

Try to find specific folders:

for i in /src/*; do echo $i; find $i |wc -l; done

If this is linux headers, try to remove oldest with:

sudo apt-get autoremove linux-headers-3.13.0-24

Personally I moved them to a mounted folder (because for me last command failed) and installed the latest with:

sudo apt-get autoremove -f

This solved my problem.

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    In my case issue was SpamAssasin-Temp. find /var/spool/MailScanner/incoming/SpamAssassin-Temp -mtime +1 -print | xargs rm -f did the job :) Thanks!
    – joystick
    Jan 12, 2016 at 10:36
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    For me, this was taking hours. However, there's a simple solution: When the second command hangs on a particular directory, kill the current command and restart changing /* to whatever directory it was hanging on. I was able to drill down to the culprit <minute. Jun 2, 2016 at 15:50
  • I used this variant of your command in order to print the numbers on the same line: for i in /usr/src/*; do echo -en "$i\t"; find $i 2>/dev/null |wc -l; done
    – cscracker
    Feb 4, 2019 at 13:13
  • for i in /src/*; do echo "$i, `find $i |wc -l`"; done|sort -nrk 2|head -10 show off top 10 largest directory
    – Mark Simon
    Jul 11, 2019 at 5:14
  • it works, thanks for save my time. Mar 24, 2022 at 11:38
15

I had the same problem, fixed it by removing the directory sessions of php

rm -rf /var/lib/php/sessions/

It may be under /var/lib/php5 if you are using a older php version.

Recreate it with the following permission

mkdir /var/lib/php/sessions/ && chmod 1733 /var/lib/php/sessions/

Permission by default for directory on Debian showed drwx-wx-wt (1733)

5
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    Any idea why this happens?
    – Sibidharan
    Jul 4, 2017 at 13:49
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    @Sibidharan in my case it was because the PHP cron job to clear the old PHP sessions was not working.
    – grim
    Feb 6, 2018 at 15:49
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    rm -rf /var/lib/php/sessions/* would probably be a better command - it won't remove the session directory, just its contents... Then you don't have to worry about recreating it
    – Shadow
    Jul 9, 2018 at 8:10
  • I did not have php session but magento session issue, similar to this. Thanks for the direction.
    – Mohit
    Feb 21, 2019 at 6:44
  • php sessions should not clear via cron jobs , set session.gc_maxlifetime in php.ini php.net/manual/en/…
    – user5490177
    Nov 1, 2019 at 2:15
4

firstly, get the inode storage usage:

df -i

The next step is to find those files. For that, we can use a small script that will list the directories and the number of files on them.

for i in /*; do echo $i; find $i |wc -l; done

From the output, you can see the directory which uses a large number of files, then repeat this script for that directory like below. Repeat it until you see the suspected directory.

for i in /home/*; do echo $i; find $i |wc -l; done

When you find the suspected directory with large number of unwanted files. Just delete the unwanted files on that directory and free up some inode space by the following the command.

rm -rf /home/bad_user/directory_with_lots_of_empty_files

You have successfully solved the problem. Check the inode usage now with the df -i command again, you can see the difference like this.

df -i
3

You can use RSYNC to DELETE the large number of files

rsync -a --delete blanktest/ test/

Create blanktest folder with 0 files in it and command will sync your test folders with large number of files(I have deleted nearly 5M files using this method).

Thanks to http://www.slashroot.in/which-is-the-fastest-method-to-delete-files-in-linux

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    From what I can tell from the article/comments, this is faster than rm * for lots of files, due to expanding the wildcard and passing/processing each argument, but rm test/ is fine for deleting a test/ folder containing lots of files.
    – mwfearnley
    Dec 11, 2018 at 16:20
  • Heads up, this works well, but make sure you set the permissions correctly on the blank directory! I didn't do this and inadvertently changed the permissions on my PHP sessions directory. Took two hours to figure out what I screwed up.
    – aecend
    Feb 21, 2020 at 21:21
2

We experienced this on a HostGator account (who place inode limits on all their hosting) following a spam attack. It left vast numbers of queue records in /root/.cpanel/comet. If this happens and you find you have no free inodes, you can run this cpanel utility through shell:

/usr/local/cpanel/bin/purge_dead_comet_files
2

Late answer: In my case, it was my session files under

/var/lib/php/sessions

that were using Inodes.
I was even unable to open my crontab or making a new directory let alone triggering the deletion operation. Since I use PHP, we have this guide where I copied the code from example 1 and set up a cronjob to execute that part of the code.

<?php
// Note: This script should be executed by the same user of web server 
process.

// Need active session to initialize session data storage access.
session_start();

// Executes GC immediately
session_gc();

// Clean up session ID created by session_gc()
session_destroy();
?>

If you're wondering how did I manage to open my crontab, then well, I deleted some sessions manually through CLI.

Hope this helps!

1

eaccelerator could be causing the problem since it compiles PHP into blocks...I've had this problem with an Amazon AWS server on a site with heavy load. Free up Inodes by deleting the eaccelerator cache in /var/cache/eaccelerator if you continue to have issues.

rm -rf /var/cache/eaccelerator/*

(or whatever your cache dir)

1

We faced similar issue recently, In case if a process refers to a deleted file, the Inode shall not be released, so you need to check lsof /, and kill/ restart the process will release the inodes.

Correct me if am wrong here.

1

As told before, filesystem may run out of inodes, if there are a lot of small files. I have provided some means to find directories that contain most files here.

1

In one of the above answers it was suggested that sessions was the cause of running out of inodes and in our case that is exactly what it was. To add to that answer though I would suggest to check the php.ini file and ensure session.gc_probability = 1 also session.gc_divisor = 1000 and session.gc_maxlifetime = 1440. In our case session.gc_probability was equal to 0 and caused this issue.

1

this article saved my day: https://bewilderedoctothorpe.net/2018/12/21/out-of-inodes/

find . -maxdepth 1 -type d | grep -v '^\.$' | xargs -n 1 -i{} find {} -xdev -type f | cut -d "/" -f 2 | uniq -c | sort -n
1
  • I don't know why this solution is not even considered! You saved my day!
    – Nem
    Jan 8, 2022 at 13:09
1

On Raspberry Pi I had a problem with /var/cache/fontconfig dir with large number of files. Removing it took more than hour. And of couse rm -rf *.cache* raised Argument list too long error. I used below one

find . -name '*.cache*' | xargs rm -f
0

you could see this info

for i in /var/run/*;do echo -n "$i "; find $i| wc -l;done | column -t
0

For those who use Docker and end up here,

When df -i says 100% Inode Use;

Just run docker rmi $(docker images -q)

It will let your created containers (running or exited) but will remove all image that ain't referenced anymore freeing a whole bunch of inodes; I went from 100% back to 18% !

Also might be worth mentioning I use a lot CI/CD with docker runner set up on this machine.

0

It could be the /tmp folder (where all the temporarily files are stored, yarn and npm script execution for exemple, specifically if you are starting a lot of node script). So normally, you just have to reboot your device or server, and it will delete all the temporarily file that you don't need. For my, I went from 100% of use to 23% of use !

-1

Many answers to this one so far and all of the above seem concrete. I think you'll be safe by using stat as you go along, but OS depending, you may get some inode errors creep up on you. So implementing your own stat call functionality using 64bit to avoid any overflow issues seems fairly compatible.

1
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    we love examples here at so ;)
    – Bohne
    Aug 13, 2018 at 12:10
-1

Run sudo apt-get autoremove command in some cases it works. If previous unused header data exists, this will be cleaned up.

-2

If you use docker, remove all images. They used many space....

Stop all containers

docker stop $(docker ps -a -q)

Delete all containers

docker rm $(docker ps -a -q)

Delete all images

docker rmi $(docker images -q)

Works to me

5
  • 1
    This does not help to detect if "too many inodes" are the problem. Jun 13, 2019 at 18:28
  • This has nothing to do with Docker.
    – Urda
    Jul 12, 2019 at 17:39
  • @Urda I have similar issue on VM Ubuntu 18.04 with 9 containers. After down all container (one throw a timeout), df -i returns 86%, after re-up 5 mains containers (used in production), then df -i again, it returns 13% !
    – bcag2
    Jan 12, 2022 at 11:17
  • @Urda: Disagree. It might have to do with docker containers. The problem occured for me after moving docker to a smaller partition. After deleting the folder containing my docker images. The problem was solved (indoes count came down from 100% to 2%)
    – mcExchange
    Sep 29, 2022 at 5:34
  • @mcExchange nope, this still has nothing to do with docker. Of course removing images frees space on your drive which you have incorrectly attributed to docker itself and not your lack of free space management. One more and final time: This has nothing to do with docker.
    – Urda
    Feb 6 at 21:36

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