I ran the same commands now from the root folder but it does not give more useful info.cnorell wrote: ↑Wed Jan 24, 2024 10:27 am Hmm, I expected to see some directories with hundreds of thousands of files in the output of the command I suggested. The goal of that command was to find a few directories that had inordinate amounts of inodes used to see where we could start clean up. Let me do some more digging and see if I can find another potential solution.
Best Regards,
Cory Norell
root@RSB-VWA-T-MON:~# { find / -xdev -printf '%h\n' | sort | uniq -c | sort -k 1 -n; } 2>/dev/null
root@RSB-VWA-T-MON:~# { find / -xdev -printf '%h\0' |sort -z |uniq -zc |sort -zk1rn; } 2>/dev/null
root@RSB-VWA-T-MON:~# for i in `find . -type d `; do echo `ls -a $i | wc -l` $i; done | sort -n
2 ./snap/lxd/23999
2 ./snap/lxd/24065
2 ./snap/lxd/common
3 ./.cache
3 ./.cache/snowflake
3 ./.local
3 ./.local/share
3 ./.local/share/nano
3 ./.ssh
3 ./snap
6 ./snap/lxd
12 .
root@RSB-VWA-T-MON:~#