Qubes-Community-Content/troubleshooting/out-of-memory.md
Andrew David Wong 93216903df Fix indentation
2020-06-04 08:12:55 -05:00

1.8 KiB

layout title permalink redirect_from
doc Out of Memory /doc/out-of-memory/
/en/doc/out-of-memory/
/doc/OutOfmemory/
/wiki/OutOfmemory/

VMs (especially templates) use pre-allocated space. The default private storage max size is 2 GB, but it's very easy to increase as needed. If the disk is completely full, you will get an Out of disk space error that may crash your system because Dom0 does not have enough disk space to work. So it's good practice to regularly check disk space usage with the command df -h in dom0 terminal.

A system that's out of space should be able to boot, but may be unable to load a desktop manager. In this case it is possible to login to dom0 terminal with Alt + Ctrl + F2. To recover disk space it may be possible to delete files in a userVM by connecting to the userVM terminal:

qvm-start <VMname>
qvm-console-dispvm <VMname>

If this does not work, check the size of /var/lib/qubes/qubes.xml. If it is zero, you'll need to use one of the file backup (stored in /var/lib/qubes/backup), hopefully you have the current data there. Find the most recent one and place in /var/lib/qubes/qubes.xml instead of the empty file.

In any case you'll need some disk space to start the VM. Check df -h output if you have some. If not, here are some hints how to free some disk space:

  1. Clean yum cache.

    sudo yum clean all
    
  2. Delete .img files of a less important VM, which can be found in /var/lib/qubes/appvms/. Then, when the system is working again, clean up the rest.

    qvm-remove <VMname>
    

    With this method, you lose the data of one VM, but it'll work more reliably.

  3. Decrease the filesystem safety margin (5% by default).

    sudo tune2fs -m 4 /dev/mapper/vg_dom0-lv_root
    
  4. Remove some unneeded files in dom0 home (if you have any, most likely not).