I got an alert this morning for disk space in /home
on a multi user remote SSH dev environment server.
Running partition -$xdev -type f -ls | sort -k 7 -r -n | head -20
I saw that the largest directories are .vscode-server
with space nearing almost 1GB.
974M .
10:06:16 my_user@my_server .vscode-server → pwd
/home/my_user/.vscode-server
10:08:06 my_user@my_server .vscode-server →
29459 38028 -rwxr-xr-x 1 my_user my_user 38940504 Aug 15 11:17 ./my_user/.vscode-server/bin/some_hash/node
26270 38028 -rwxr-xr-x 1 my_user my_user 38940504 Sep 3 16:51 ./my_user/.vscode-server/bin/some_other_hash/node
24078 38028 -rwxr-xr-x 1 my_user my_user 38940504 Oct 15 10:34 ./my_user/.vscode-server/bin/yet_another_hash/node
2387 38028 -rwxr-xr-x 1 my_user my_user 38940504 Oct 9 01:58 /home/my_user/.vscode-server/bin/last_hash/node
Looking through the directories it looks like this is where a lot of VsCode lives on the remote server and where remote extensions are installed to.
Does anyone know if there is any safe files that can be cleaned up in .vscode-server
or is just adding more space to /home
the solution.
From my practice, you can delete the .vscode-server directory to free space. Next time you log in to this server, the system will automatically install another .vscode-server which tends to be much smaller than the original one.