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One Hat Cyber Team
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216.73.216.23
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178.33.27.10
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Linux cpanel.dev-unit.com 3.10.0-1160.108.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Jan 25 16:17:31 UTC 2024 x86_64
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View File Name :
disk_inode_usage.md
### Understand the alert This alarm presents the percentage of used `inodes` storage of a particular disk. The number of `inodes` indicates the number of files and folders you have. An `inode` is a data structure, containing metadata about a file. All filenames are internally mapped to respective `inode` numbers, so if you have a lot of files, it means there are a lot of `inodes`. If the alarm is raised, it means that your storage device is running out of `inode` space. Each disk has a particular **limitation on the amount of `inodes` it can store**, determined by its size. Many modern filesystems use dynamically allocated `inodes` instead of a static table. These should not be presented on the charts associated with this alarm, and should not ever trigger it. If such a filesystem **does** trigger this alarm, and it's constantly reporting max `inode` usage, it's probably a bug in the filesystem driver. Some such filesystems incorrectly report having max `inode` count when they should not because they have no max limit, and in turn they trigger a false positive alarm. ### Troubleshoot the alert Clear cache files or delete unnecessary files and folders - To reduce the amount of how many `inodes` you store currently, you can clear your cache, trash any unnecessary files and folders in your system. We strongly suggest that you practice a high degree of caution when cleaning up drives, and removing files, make sure that you are certain that you delete only unnecessary files. ### Useful resources [Linux Inodes](https://www.javatpoint.com/linux-inodes) [Understanding UNIX / Linux filesystem Inodes](https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/understanding-unixlinux-filesystem-inodes.html)