π ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
Root filesystem fills unexpectedly and /var/log/journal grows continuously.
Environment & Reproduction
systemd-journald retention defaults are too permissive for available disk size.
Root Cause Analysis
Run: journalctl –disk-usage and inspect /etc/systemd/journald.conf settings.
Quick Triage
Check noisy services generating high-volume logs with journalctl -u and rate patterns.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Capture journalctl –disk-usage output before cleanup.

Solution – Primary Fix
Capture vacuum command result and configured SystemMaxUse limits.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Vacuum old logs: sudo journalctl –vacuum-size=1G or –vacuum-time=14d.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
Set limits in journald.conf, e.g., SystemMaxUse=1G and RuntimeMaxUse=256M.
Rollback Plan
Restart daemon: sudo systemctl restart systemd-journald.
Prevention & Hardening
Re-run journalctl –disk-usage and verify stable growth profile over time.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Tune service verbosity and add monitoring alerts for journal usage thresholds.
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
Restore previous journald.conf and restart systemd-journald if limits are too strict.
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