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Forum Discussion
ziemowit
Jul 26, 2024Aspirant
BTRFS read-only state, OS 6.8.10, ReadyNAS Ultra 4
Hello, everybody! It seems like I have met the same problem as a few other people here, namely BTRFS becoming read-only. Background Machine is Ultra 4, with 2GB memory, converted to run OS6. Capac...
tijgert
Aug 02, 2024Guide
I am adding to this discussion because I am looking for an answer to the exact same question.
My ReadyNas 516 accidentally filled up to the max (due to an emergency backup of another drive) and threw an error because of No Space Left. The Log reflects this to be the only case and there is NO hardware issue, which has been confirmed. SO there is NO backup needed of the system, which I already have (mirrored NAS).
I just need to be able to delete files again.
The system however keeps switching to ReadOnly mode when I reboot due to lack of space, and due to ReadOnly mode I cannot create more space by deleting files...
So, with all the hardware being just fine, how do I tell the system to let me erase files so I can create more space?
I am SSH inept, but I can follow instructions if I have to.
I can enter SSH via Putty and I find myself at the prompt:
What can I do next?
Sandshark
Aug 02, 2024Sensei
tijgert , I answered your question in the other thread where you posted it. Note that it's best to open a new thread so different advice to two users doesn't get confused and posting the same query is certainly unnecessary.
- tijgertAug 02, 2024Guide
Got it.
I was trying to avoid asking a similar question in a new thread.
Doing that twice actually created the clutter I was trying to avoid...
I'll ghost this thread and kindly request anyone to forward any replies to the other thread.
- SandsharkAug 03, 2024Sensei
tijgert wrote:I was trying to avoid asking a similar question in a new thread.
Doing that twice actually created the clutter I was trying to avoid...
But when it turns out the symptoms are similar but the root cause is not, then the advise for each person diverges, and it can get messy and confusion.
It's great that you first searched for a solution. Too many don't and post a question that's been answered a dozen or more times. But when you don't find a solution, it's usually best to make a new post, especially if the original post is still active.
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