Disk quota exceeded
This warning means that you have exceeded your disk space quota or have too many files on the disk area. To see which quota is used up, type:
An example output is shown below:
Personal home folder Quota
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
/users/jdoe Capacity: 653M/10G Files: .68k/100k
Project applications Quota
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
/projappl/project_2000040 Capacity: 283.5M/50G Files: .37k/100k
Project scratch Quota
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
/scratch/project_2000040 Capacity: 1.098T*/1T Files: .02k/1000k
The asterisk (*
) indicates which quota is exceeded. To be able to create
new files in this disk area you need to delete or move files elsewhere, e.g. to
Allas. If moving/deleting data is infeasible, you
can apply for more quota.
Conda
A common reason for exceeding your $HOME
or /projappl
disk quota is the
usage of Conda-based installations. Conda environments result in the
creation of excessive numbers of files which cause extra load on the Lustre
parallel file system used in the HPC environment. This manifests as
prolonged startup times and disk slowness affecting all users.
If you need to use Conda on CSC supercomputers, we require that you containerize your environment, see usage policy. To easily containerize your Conda environments, please see the Tykky container wrapper tool.
If you are new to containers, you can consult the following relevant sections of tutorials which are collected as part of previous CSC courses:
I have deleted many files, but still get disk quota exceeded warning?
It is common for some software to create hidden directories starting with a dot
(.
), such as .cache
, .cargo
or .local
. These are often created by
default in your personal home folder and may cause confusion if they make you
exceed your disk quota. As hidden files are not shown by regular ls
command,
it may seem like moving/deleting most folders/files does not have any effect.
To also see all hidden files/directories in a given folder, you need to use
ls -a
option. LUE (Lustre Usage Explorer) is another
recommended tool for finding where you have a lot of data that by default also
checks for hidden files and directories. Please use it if you exceed your disk
quota and have a hard time figuring out where the files might be hiding. For
example: