I'm new to openplotter
After a fresh install in a raspberry pi 3, 8Gb SD, after about 24hrs of running the pi the /dev/root folder is full and if i reboot the pi won't start anymore.
Made a fresh install 3 times, same result.
I'm new to linux, and don't really know where to solve this problem.
I guess your are using the img file and not the NOOBS file.
Go to preferences, old raspi-config, 7 Advanced options, A1 expand filesystem to use all the available space of your SD
I'm using the NOOBS installation.
Tried to expand the filesystem, but i get a error message saying partition layout is not supported by the tool, probably because of using the NOOBS installer.
If you want to take a look, i can give you access to the pi via Teamviewer on my pc
Are you using any connected storage device such as USB pen-drives or USB hard disks?
Are you using any downloading service such as torrent?
You have suggested to use 'Teamviewer' and I suppose that it will be under Windows... I think it can't be helpful, because some partitions cannot be read at Windows.
Regards
(2018-06-07, 08:53 AM)Otoio Wrote: [ -> ]Are you using any connected storage device such as USB pen-drives or USB hard disks?
Are you using any downloading service such as torrent?
You have suggested to use 'Teamviewer' and I suppose that it will be under Windows... I think it can't be helpful, because some partitions cannot be read at Windows.
Regards
Not using any connected storage devices. Just openplotter on a sd-card.
No downloads. Only a second wifi USB adapter to forward the internet connection.
Made a clean install last night, this morning i had the same problem.
(2018-06-07, 09:41 AM)Yannick Wrote: [ -> ] (2018-06-07, 08:53 AM)Otoio Wrote: [ -> ]Are you using any connected storage device such as USB pen-drives or USB hard disks?
Are you using any downloading service such as torrent?
You have suggested to use 'Teamviewer' and I suppose that it will be under Windows... I think it can't be helpful, because some partitions cannot be read at Windows.
Regards
Not using any connected storage devices. Just openplotter on a sd-card.
No downloads. Only a second wifi USB adapter to forward the internet connection.
Made a clean install last nicht, this morning i had the same problem.
Hi, have you tried an SD of 16 GB?
Not yet. I will order one today to try.
(2018-06-07, 08:53 AM)Otoio Wrote: [ -> ]Are you using any connected storage device such as USB pen-drives or USB hard disks?
Are you using any downloading service such as torrent?
You have suggested to use 'Teamviewer' and I suppose that it will be under Windows... I think it can't be helpful, because some partitions cannot be read at Windows.
Regards
Anyone needing to read Linux partitions on a SD card from Windows I highly recommend this free program from Disk Internals .... It's also nice for dual boot desktops
Linux Reader 2.7
(2018-06-06, 06:27 PM)Yannick Wrote: [ -> ]I'm new to openplotter
After a fresh install in a raspberry pi 3, 8Gb SD, after about 24hrs of running the pi the /dev/root folder is full and if i reboot the pi won't start anymore.
Made a fresh install 3 times, same result.
I'm new to linux, and don't really know where to solve this problem.
(2018-06-07, 10:10 AM)LaMare Wrote: [ -> ]Hi, have you tried an SD of 16 GB?
A good record to use a SD of 16 GB, but something must be wrong in that installation.
I'm looking at mine and I have only 4.3 GB used (it's a fresh installation too).
Code:
pi@openplotter:~ $ df -h
S.ficheros Tamaño Usados Disp Uso% Montado en
/dev/root 14G 4,3G 8,4G 34% /
devtmpfs 460M 0 460M 0% /dev
tmpfs 464M 0 464M 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs 464M 6,3M 458M 2% /run
tmpfs 5,0M 4,0K 5,0M 1% /run/lock
tmpfs 464M 0 464M 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/mmcblk0p6 68M 22M 47M 32% /boot
tmpfs 93M 0 93M 0% /run/user/1000
/dev/mmcblk0p5 30M 397K 28M 2% /media/pi/SETTINGS
I'd try to download again the NOOBS file and try again a new fresh installation. And, by the way, trying another new SD card would be worth too, because perhaps it could be a SD's problem too.
If the problem continues, this forum could be helpful:
https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewt...hp?t=71520
Good night
You could perhaps run a command from time to time to see which folders are growing in size over time. Try this:
sudo du -chd 1 | sort -h
Make sure you run in from the root directory as it only operates on the current directory. It will list the directories in order of size, smallest to largest.
Chris