Help Inodes Used 97% (guess moodle)

I recive mails for two days now informing that my site with the username epiz_21987217 utilises over 50% of its daily resource limits. Today : Inodes Used 97 % (29237 of 30019)

My first thought is that moodle is the cause. But the site is not open to students.
I have installed a few plugins to figure out which are friendly and usable on production.

Any help welcome. Thanks

@ateliermedia said:
I recive mails for two days now informing that my site with the username epiz_21987217 utilises over 50% of its daily resource limits. Today : Inodes Used 97 % (29237 of 30019)

My first thought is that moodle is the cause. But the site is not open to students.
I have installed a few plugins to figure out which are friendly and usable on production.

Any help welcome. Thanks

What’s your problem exactly?

Can you provide a screenshot of your files, if private just blur it.

How to find the cause and reduce the inodes used?

I also have a wordpress testing site but disable automated upgrade and set cache.
None of the sites are open to public. Only tested few plugins to develop a simple User interface for students.

@ateliermedia said:
How to find the cause and reduce the inodes used?

I also have a wordpress testing site but disable automated upgrade and set cache.
None of the sites are open to public. Only tested few plugins to develop a simple User interface for students.

Have you checked the KB? https://infinityfree.net/support/inode-limit/
If you have too many files and direcotries, there would be many inodes.
Remove any of your files/folders that you do not use and tell us again what hapenned.
Also, it takes some time to show the actual nomber of inodes, it might stay the same for a few hours.

Moodle and Wordpress were installed via softaculous.
Then a few plugins to manage courses and simplify user interface.

I’ll check the modules to deactivate and try to keep “inode” below the limit 80%.

Thanks for the link and suggestions.

All the best, cheers

@ateliermedia said:
Moodle and Wordpress were installed via softaculous.
Then a few plugins to manage courses and simplify user interface.

I’ll check the modules to deactivate and try to keep “inode” below the limit 80%.

Thanks for the link and suggestions.

All the best, cheers

Thanks, Cheers.
If the problem persists or if you need anything else, ask us here.

@ateliermedia said:
Moodle and Wordpress were installed via softaculous.
Then a few plugins to manage courses and simplify user interface.

I’ll check the modules to deactivate and try to keep “inode” below the limit 80%.

Thanks for the link and suggestions.

All the best, cheers

Try waiting for the cpanel stats to update cause it may take up to 24 hours, if not the answer maybe the Modle CMS might have a lot of files for it to work and also the visits of your website doesn’t affect the Inodes but will count to daily hits

Well, i unistall wordpress (running without plugins) and some moodle features.
Maybe that will help to keep within inode limit.

Oops… it seems that i reached the inode limit by deleting moodle plugins:

This site/page has used all avaialble php / apache processes allowed on free hosting account.

Refreshing the page once the amount of apache / php processes are reduced will cause the site to work

@ateliermedia said:
Oops… it seems that i reached the inode limit by deleting moodle plugins:

This site/page has used all avaialble php / apache processes allowed on free hosting account.

Refreshing the page once the amount of apache / php processes are reduced will cause the site to work

It will be fixed soon and you will be able to use it.

Moodle by default is heavy. I’m uninstalling as much plugins as possible to keep simple and light. Thanks again.

@ateliermedia said:
Moodle by default is heavy. I’m uninstalling as much plugins as possible to keep simple and light. Thanks again.
No probelm, glad you fixed it now.