Installing moodle on Ubuntu server 18.04












-1















I am following the guide on Installation guide used how to install moodle but im getting stuck on step 5 on command sudo cp -R /opt/moodle /var/www/html/ after executing the command i receive error messages that state that i am unable to create the directories due to insufficient space. Even though i have over 30gb disk space allocated to the Linux server










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    -1















    I am following the guide on Installation guide used how to install moodle but im getting stuck on step 5 on command sudo cp -R /opt/moodle /var/www/html/ after executing the command i receive error messages that state that i am unable to create the directories due to insufficient space. Even though i have over 30gb disk space allocated to the Linux server










    share|improve this question



























      -1












      -1








      -1








      I am following the guide on Installation guide used how to install moodle but im getting stuck on step 5 on command sudo cp -R /opt/moodle /var/www/html/ after executing the command i receive error messages that state that i am unable to create the directories due to insufficient space. Even though i have over 30gb disk space allocated to the Linux server










      share|improve this question
















      I am following the guide on Installation guide used how to install moodle but im getting stuck on step 5 on command sudo cp -R /opt/moodle /var/www/html/ after executing the command i receive error messages that state that i am unable to create the directories due to insufficient space. Even though i have over 30gb disk space allocated to the Linux server







      server moodle






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      edited Feb 16 at 0:39







      Arthur

















      asked Feb 16 at 0:30









      ArthurArthur

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      13






















          2 Answers
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          0















          1. Was less space allocated to your server before?

          2. What does df -h show?

          3. If 1. is true, run sudo resize2fs /dev/<insert your root partition here> and reboot






          share|improve this answer
























          • 1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 0:54













          • Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:01













          • [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:04













          • Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:07











          • tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:12



















          0














          Found a workaround for this issue. You can use fixed size drives to avoid this issue instead of dynamically sized drives






          share|improve this answer

























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            0















            1. Was less space allocated to your server before?

            2. What does df -h show?

            3. If 1. is true, run sudo resize2fs /dev/<insert your root partition here> and reboot






            share|improve this answer
























            • 1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 0:54













            • Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:01













            • [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:04













            • Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:07











            • tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:12
















            0















            1. Was less space allocated to your server before?

            2. What does df -h show?

            3. If 1. is true, run sudo resize2fs /dev/<insert your root partition here> and reboot






            share|improve this answer
























            • 1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 0:54













            • Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:01













            • [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:04













            • Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:07











            • tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:12














            0












            0








            0








            1. Was less space allocated to your server before?

            2. What does df -h show?

            3. If 1. is true, run sudo resize2fs /dev/<insert your root partition here> and reboot






            share|improve this answer














            1. Was less space allocated to your server before?

            2. What does df -h show?

            3. If 1. is true, run sudo resize2fs /dev/<insert your root partition here> and reboot







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Feb 16 at 0:44









            JesseJesse

            484




            484













            • 1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 0:54













            • Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:01













            • [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:04













            • Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:07











            • tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:12



















            • 1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 0:54













            • Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:01













            • [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:04













            • Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

              – Jesse
              Feb 16 at 1:07











            • tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

              – Arthur
              Feb 16 at 1:12

















            1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 0:54







            1. The server had 30gb allocated from creation. 2. output of df -h image link

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 0:54















            Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:01







            Seems like your root partition has the size of 3.9gb only. What does sudo lsblk -o NAME,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT,LABEL print? Try sudo resize2fs /dev/mapper/ubuntu--vg-ubuntu--lv.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:01















            [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:04







            [output of lsblk] (imgur.com/a/7VZCVkF)

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:04















            Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:07





            Looks good. resize2fs should work then.

            – Jesse
            Feb 16 at 1:07













            tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:12





            tried the resize2fs command you provided above still the same error

            – Arthur
            Feb 16 at 1:12













            0














            Found a workaround for this issue. You can use fixed size drives to avoid this issue instead of dynamically sized drives






            share|improve this answer






























              0














              Found a workaround for this issue. You can use fixed size drives to avoid this issue instead of dynamically sized drives






              share|improve this answer




























                0












                0








                0







                Found a workaround for this issue. You can use fixed size drives to avoid this issue instead of dynamically sized drives






                share|improve this answer















                Found a workaround for this issue. You can use fixed size drives to avoid this issue instead of dynamically sized drives







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Feb 16 at 2:46

























                answered Feb 16 at 2:31









                ArthurArthur

                13




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