ULG files are taking 25 GB disk space

I would like to know what ULG files are on Ubuntu. After trying to find what was using the disk space, I found a directory using 25 GB of 28 GB total, and this directory had 785 ULG files.

Note that I'm working on an Intel Aero RTF, using Ubuntu 16.04, and it can store 28 GB.

Output of du command (the essential part):

root@intel-aero:/var/lib/mavlink-router# du -h /var/lib/mavlink-router/
25G /var/lib/mavlink-router/

Number of files:

root@intel-aero:/var/lib/mavlink-router# find /var/lib/mavlink-router/ -type f | wc -l
785

Partial results of ls:

root@intel-aero:/var/lib/mavlink-router# ls -lh
total 25G
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 73M May 22 05:45 00000-2018-05-22_05-14-52.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 36M May 22 06:00 00001-2018-05-22_05-45-23.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 9.0M May 22 05:00 00002-2018-05-22_04-57-05.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 11M May 22 05:01 00003-2018-05-22_04-57-05.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 117M May 22 05:46 00004-2018-05-22_04-57-05.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 220M May 22 2018 00005-2018-05-22_04-57-05.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 22 2018 00006-2018-05-22_06-31-13.ulg
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 May 22 2018 00007-2018-05-22_06-31-14.ulg

df result:

root@intel-aero:/var/lib/mavlink-router# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/root 28G 28G 0 100% /
devtmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /dev
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs 1.9G 76M 1.8G 4% /run
tmpfs 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs 1.9G 48K 1.9G 1% /var/volatile
tmpfs 1.9G 4.0K 1.9G 1% /tmp
/dev/mmcblk0p1 28M 7.7M 21M 28% /boot
tmpfs 382M 0 382M 0% /run/user/0

So questions are:

  • What type of file is a ULG file? Is it a save, config, ... ?
  • Can I remove some of them (or all of them) without any issue later?
6

1 Answer

According to a similar question in an Intel forum, Disk fills up, large ULG files in /var/lib/mavlink-router, these ULG files are logfiles of the mavlink-router.

There are only two workarounds:

  • Either disable logging:

    Modify /etc/mavlink-router/main.conf and comment out the line below:

    [General]
    #Log=/var/log/mavlink-router
  • Or setup a cronjob to delete them regularly once a day:

    0 2 * * * rm /var/lib/mavlink-router/*.ulg && systemctl restart mavlink-router.service

At first, I thought logrotate with the following snippet could be of help:

/var/lib/mavlink-router/*.ulg { rotate 2 daily missingok notifempty compress sharedscripts postrotate systemctl restart mavlink-router.service endscript
}

But this won't work as intended because the filenames already have a timestamp and number in them, so each file has a different name and logrotate would simply compress them but never delete them. E.g. 00000-2018-05-22_05-14-52.ulg would become 00000-2018-05-22_05-14-52.ulg.1.gz but never get deleted because there won't be another file with that name that claims its place.

See this post for a possible solution with logrotate for files with timestamps in their name.

1

Your Answer

Sign up or log in

Sign up using Google Sign up using Facebook Sign up using Email and Password

Post as a guest

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

You Might Also Like