The easiest way to find out is to wait until you start getting “No space left on device” messages on the system log.
There are actually two reasons for such a thing to happen. The filesystem could have no more blocks available (the usual case) or the filesystem could be out of inodes (the not so usual case).
Inodes are filesystem data structures that store basic information about a regular file, directory, or other file system object. For each file, the filesystem occupies at least one inode.
The default inode ratio on an ubuntu server as configured in /etc/mke2fs.conf is one inode for every 16Kbytes of data. So creating a lot files of smaller size could lead to having enough space on the filesystem but no more inodes to create new files or directories.
You can see the amount of free inodes using df -i
Filesystem Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on /dev/sda1 1251712 1251712 0 100% / tmpfs 129512 2 129510 1% /lib/init/rw udev 129512 488 129024 1% /dev tmpfs 129512 3 129509 1% /dev/shm /dev/sda6 1251712 148360 1103352 12% /usr /dev/sda7 35291136 21862 35269274 1% /home /dev/sda8 35241984 31055 35210929 1% /var
Unfortunately, the system libraries of linux do not give out distinct error messages for a filesystem being out of blocks or being out of inodes. The message is always “No space left on device”.
Starting from version 0.9.0, redmine stores session data in cookies on the client side, so this problem will not occur any more.