limbo directories are temporary files. Normally they are cleaned up
before the process exits. I don't know what is causing that to not
happen here. Perhaps the process is terminating abruptly. It would
be nice to investigate, but in the interim I think it would be very
reasonable to turn on tmpwatch on this machine. limbo directories
more than 24h old are I think highly unlikely to be still in use.
I don't know why it is putting them directly in /tmp.
limbo directories are temporary files. Normally they are cleaned up
before the process exits. I don't know what is causing that to not
happen here. Perhaps the process is terminating abruptly. It would
be nice to investigate, but in the interim I think it would be very
reasonable to turn on tmpwatch on this machine. limbo directories
more than 24h old are I think highly unlikely to be still in use.
I don't know why it is putting them directly in /tmp.
--
Martin