📖 ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
Root or var filesystem fills quickly while systemd-journald stores large log volumes.
Environment & Reproduction
Default journald limits are too high for disk size or noisy services flood logs.
Root Cause Analysis
Run journalctl –disk-usage and inspect /etc/systemd/journald.conf effective values.
Quick Triage
Vacuum old logs using journalctl –vacuum-time=7d or –vacuum-size=1G as policy allows.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Set SystemMaxUse and RuntimeMaxUse in journald.conf then restart systemd-journald.

Solution – Primary Fix
Reduce noisy unit verbosity and verify disk growth normalizes after changes.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Confirm steady usage with repeated journalctl –disk-usage checks over time.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
Revert aggressive retention settings if incident forensics require longer local history.
Rollback Plan
Define retention policy per server class and centralize long-term logs externally.
Prevention & Hardening
Alert on journald growth rate and filesystem thresholds for /var/log/journal.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Deploy journald defaults through configuration management with environment-specific caps.
Related tutorial: View the step-by-step tutorial for rhel-9.
View all rhel-9 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub →
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Use journald.conf and journalctl man pages with RHEL 9 logging recommendations.
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