-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On the other hand, I bet if you deleted that file (move it somewhere else= ,=20 where you can retrieve it later) everything will be okay. You shouldn't b= e=20 able to see the journal file. But 33 mb is about right, that's what my fi= le=20 systems showed as being used before I started dumping stuff on them. Am 20 Freitag, Dezember 2002 11:23 schrieb Lynn David Newton: > I just discovered a 33MB file in my root directory > named /.journal, dated March 26 of this year, which > would have been about the time I upgraded to RH 7.2 > (from 7.1) which is probably also the time I converted > to ext3 filesystems. I'm guessing this file is some > sort of object that keeps the now-journaled filesystem > in order, but I don't know that. Can someone identify > this file for me and give a high-level explanation of > what it does? > > If it's what it appears to be, that's a pretty hefty > piece of disk size to sacrifice to ext3. Wouldn't want > to live without jfs, though. > > There is no such file in /home, which is mounted and > also type ext3, so I suppose if this thing is > journaling overhead, it must be designed to handle all > slices on the local system. (That's a question in the > form of a hypothesis.) > > Inquiring minds want to know. - --=20 Nathan England plug at the-arcanum.org jabber id: linuxjunkie@jabber.earth.li "A free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular." - --Adlai Stevenson - ----------------------------------------------------------------- Registered Linux User #189789, Machine #106603 www.sincerechoice.org Spam related material will be forwarded to: uce@ftc.gov -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.7 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE+BKvGQ7yNnsYcupwRAvYvAKCkhyH3HphyGzP8ieExxzX5HXYVuACff5xl csQ2UvdclsrNxBhI5f6dBiA=3D =3DZEEo -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----