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I start by saying i am a noob in Linux systems and the only reason i need help is because i built a home server to have a bit more complex developing environment plus the obvious benefits like media server and file storage. I followed some online tutorials and everything was fine until yesterday when i installed cockpit in order to have some VM's running on it, when the system told me that there is no free space left. Therefore, i am sure something i did not do correctly since the SSD i have Ubuntu installed on has 256Gb, out of which, as far as i can see, only half is occupied. To put things in perspective, i have one more 256Gb SSD (sdb) + one 2Tb HDD which (sdc) which are logically fused into /mnt/cloud which i use as media server Can someone please guide me on how to fix this?

Thank you.

Result of df -i

Result for sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL

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  • OMG, no....20.04. It's the latest version. I am changing the tag now. Thank you for pointing that out
    – Empusa
    Mar 30, 2021 at 13:20
  • Latest version? The October release (20.10) came out later than the April (20.04) release so please avoid incorrect or vague terms
    – guiverc
    Mar 30, 2021 at 21:35

2 Answers 2

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Your answer only points out df -i which only tells you about inodes, not really space left. However, df -h will respond with space used.

If you're unsure which folder takes the most space, run: sudo du -sh /* and enter deeper into the folders which seem to take the most.

My guess would be some logs were produced and eventually took too much space which I would expect to find either under /var folder or somewhere within the folder with your VM (probably your ~/ dir).

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So basically the problem was exactly the one here: Ubuntu Server 18.04 LVM out of space with improper default partitioning

But i am still wondering why my sdb1 partition appears in my root Media folder

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