π ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
System log partition fills quickly due to unbounded or high-volume journald data.
Environment & Reproduction
Low disk alerts, large /var/log/journal size, and slower maintenance operations.
Root Cause Analysis
Verbose services, missing journald limits, or repeated crash loops generating noisy logs.
Quick Triage
Run journalctl –disk-usage and review noisy units with journalctl -u unit-name.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Use journalctl –vacuum-size or –vacuum-time to reclaim space without deleting all history.

Solution – Primary Fix
Configure SystemMaxUse and RuntimeMaxUse in journald.conf, then restart systemd-journald.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Resolve repetitive errors in failing units rather than only trimming logs.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
Tune RateLimitIntervalSec and RateLimitBurst where excessive bursts are expected.
Rollback Plan
Confirm journal directories maintain correct contexts after migration or manual edits.
Prevention & Hardening
Track journal growth with regular metrics and alert before partition exhaustion.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Define log retention standards in baseline hardening for all RHEL 9 hosts.
Related tutorial: View the step-by-step tutorial for rhel-9.
View all rhel-9 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub β
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Recheck disk usage and verify stable growth after 24 hours of normal workload.
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