Nope. In fact, there's barely more than 2GB total on the entire system, and /var, as well as all my other partitions except /boot are on the same root partition, so it has about 10 or 11 GB free. James Christopher A. Bier wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Is the partition that /var is on full or almost full? > > On Thu, 2003-03-13 at 13:53, James Colannino wrote: > Hey everyone. I've had some problems with an old machine of mine for a > >>while. I have a P200 MMX running Slackware 8.1 that's worked very > > well > >>so far. The BIOS is able to recognize all 13GB of my HD which I've >>found to be quite rare with such an old machine, and it seemed for a >>while to be pretty stable. >> >>However, everytime I try to run "updatedb" so that I can locate files, >>it works for a few minutes and then always without fail will give me a >>segmentation fault. Then, if I've attempted that command, everytime I >>halt or restart the system, it'll give me a segmentation fault as it's >>unmounting all remote filesystems (I don't actually have any -- I'm >>planning on removing all references to nfs from the system.) If I >>haven't tried to updatedb, it halts and restarts without any problems. >> >>After I've gotten one segmentation fault from running the command >>"updatedb," from now on, until I reboot the system, it doesn't even > > work > >>the Hard Drive at all before I get the same error, this time saying >>something about a NULL Pointer. >> >>This is really frustrating me. I'm pretty sure from other > > observations > >>I've made that excessive writing (and/or reading -- not sure) to the >>disk is what's producing these errors. >> >>Now for my question. Do you think maybe the processor is bad, or do > > you > >>think maybe there's something wrong with the IDE controllers? This is >>kind of an odd problem. I'm certain that the disk is good. I've had >>very good luck with it thus far (of course I'll probably plunk it in >>another system and give it a good diagnostical checkup to make sure.) > > I > >>tried running the processor at 166 Mhz as opposed to 200 Mhz in a vain >>attempt to see if maybe for some reason the CPU was overheating, but >>that I see is most likely not the problem. I did over clock it once > > to > >>233 Mhz, and had the segmentation faults start occuring (this was > > before > >>I'd used the system pretty much at all though,) so I originally > > thought > >>that maybe I over heated the CPU and thus set it back to 200. It > > seemed > >>to work alright, but it's still producing these errors (only when I > > use > >>the disk a great deal though.) Very strange. Any ideas? >> >>James > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) > > iD8DBQE+cPPmE5xXU3JS1mQRAmXSAKCFtB8TBHqVsuSeNkPEYrQtp37ingCgpdt7 > 1HKWo2E+i9zmjtukCOYu4yY= > =oPpO > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > > > > > > -- The New Penguin Times: A New Linux Online Magazine http://www.newpenguintimes.com