• Our team is looking to connect with folks who use email services provided by Plesk, or a premium service. If you'd like to be part of the discovery process and share your experiences, we invite you to complete this short screening survey. If your responses match the persona we are looking for, you'll receive a link to schedule a call at your convenience. We look forward to hearing from you!
  • We are looking for U.S.-based freelancer or agency working with SEO or WordPress for a quick 30-min interviews to gather feedback on XOVI, a successful German SEO tool we’re looking to launch in the U.S.
    If you qualify and participate, you’ll receive a $30 Amazon gift card as a thank-you. Please apply here. Thanks for helping shape a better SEO product for agencies!
  • The BIND DNS server has already been deprecated and removed from Plesk for Windows.
    If a Plesk for Windows server is still using BIND, the upgrade to Plesk Obsidian 18.0.70 will be unavailable until the administrator switches the DNS server to Microsoft DNS. We strongly recommend transitioning to Microsoft DNS within the next 6 weeks, before the Plesk 18.0.70 release.
  • The Horde component is removed from Plesk Installer. We recommend switching to another webmail software supported in Plesk.

Question /tmp folder almost full

antonello

New Pleskian
Hi,
i have /tmp folder almost full in a centos 6.5 and plesk 12.5.30
is it safe to delete files in /tmp folder?
There are many files very old for example:

repo_transport_tmp_SDfvoij
or
php34jkfdnl4
or
timthumb_tmpimg_34fdfFR

I will appreciate every help
Thanks
Antonello
 
I have 25GB in /tmp ...

/tmp/systemd-private-11abca3d47fd4d4ca4c057d616636dd5-plesk-php72-fpm.service

Why is it so big and doesn't it clean automatically?
 
Thanks, but if any files are used?

 
Thanks, but if any files are used?
Stop Plesk services:
# service psa stopall
Stop PHP-PFM:
# service plesk-php<version>-fpm stop
Just in case some stuff is still running:
# service postfix stop
# service dovecot stop
# service nginx stop
# service httpd stop (or # service apache2 stop)
# service mariadb stop (or # service mysqld stop)

Then remove the temp files, then in the opposite order:
# service mariadb start
# service httpd start
.
.
.
 
Stopping services is not necessary - with linux, you can delete files that are still open, and they will only really be removed from disk & the space recovered when the last access handle to the file is closed.
As files in /tmp, by definition, aren't guaranteed to be persistent, it should not break anything if you just remove everything. But to be safe, you can use the suggestion to use find with option -mtime +1 to get only files older than a day, and then let it remove them with -exec rm -rf {} \;. Note that if you don't understand how this works you probably shouldn't use it, as there is ample opportunity to introduce bugs that sooner or later do a rm -rf /, wiping your system.
 
Stopping services is not necessary - with linux, you can delete files that are still open, and they will only really be removed from disk & the space recovered when the last access handle to the file is closed.
As files in /tmp, by definition, aren't guaranteed to be persistent, it should not break anything if you just remove everything. But to be safe, you can use the suggestion to use find with option -mtime +1 to get only files older than a day, and then let it remove them with -exec rm -rf {} \;. Note that if you don't understand how this works you probably shouldn't use it, as there is ample opportunity to introduce bugs that sooner or later do a rm -rf /, wiping your system.
Thanks,
Restarting the server automatically cleans the tmp directory.
 
Back
Top