<P>Hi all,</P>
<P>I have a master kdc and a slave kdc. In the master kdc, I run a script that executes kprop to propagate the database to the slave every 2 seconds (for testing purposes). On the slave kdc, I run the "df" command periodically. I noticed that the disk space percentage usage climbs up slowly. Eventually, it goes up to 100%, and my slave machine crashes. I don't understand how/why kprop could cause the disk space in the slave machine to go up because the master database is always the same size. If I stop the propagation, the disk space in the slave doesn't go down, until I reboot the machine. </P>
<P>This is sample output from the "df" command:</P>
<P>Filesystem 1k-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on<BR>/dev/mtdblock3 14976 13436 1540 90% /</P>
<P>This is sample output from the "mount" command:</P>
<P>/dev/mtdblock3 on / type jffs2 (rw)<BR>/proc on /proc type proc (rw)<BR>none on /dev/pts type devpts (rw)<BR>/dev/ram1 on /tmp type ramfs (rw)<BR>/dev/ram2 on /var type ramfs (rw)</P>
<P>Perhaps, this is a different problem that doesn't have anything to do with kprop, but I only see this happening when I run the kprop script. Does anyone have any clues about this strange problem? I'm not familiar with how the kprop process works. If someone can give me a general overview of the process that occurs when the master database is propagated to the slave kdc, that would be tremenously helpful. Thanks for your time and help.</P>
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