The Beaglebones in question were distributed by Mouser (their part # 
958-BBB01-SC-505), and show "beagleboard.org/BeagleBone Black Rev C - 
manufactured by GHI Electronics" on each box.

uname -a returns:

Linux beaglebone 4.4.9-ti-r25 #1 SMP Thu May 5 23:08:13 UTC 2016 armv7l 
GNU/Linux


On Thursday, July 6, 2017 at 3:02:54 PM UTC-4, Mark Vinson wrote:
>
> Greg - Thanks for the feedback. From my new Beaglebone Blacks:
>
> *Debian release: (uname –r):* 4.4.9-ti-r25
>
>
> *df –h:*
>
> Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
>
> udev             10M     0   10M   0% /dev
>
> tmpfs            99M  8.4M   91M   9% /run
>
> /dev/mmcblk0p1  3.5G  3.2G   57M  99% /
>
> tmpfs           247M  4.0K  247M   1% /dev/shm
>
> tmpfs           5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
>
> tmpfs           247M     0  247M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
>
> tmpfs            50M     0   50M   0% /run/user/1000
>
> Apparently something in my "/" mount is taking up most of the storage. 
> This is an out of the box unit - as received. My next step will be to start 
> comparing all the stuff under "/" to my Debian 7 units to see what's 
> different. I don't know enough about Debian to spot the obvious otherwise.
>
> But it seems like a flaw to receive 11 new units, all with almost no 
> available storage.
>
> Thanks for your help. Any other ideas before I start ignorantly searching?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Mark Vinson
>
> On Wednesday, July 5, 2017 at 5:57:31 PM UTC-4, Greg wrote:
>>
>> Wow, that's weird.  Are you able to get to a terminal and run this 
>> command?
>>
>> df -h
>>
>> Here is what my BBGW shows:
>>
>> Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
>> udev             10M     0   10M   0% /dev
>> tmpfs            98M  2.8M   95M   3% /run
>> /dev/mmcblk1p1  3.6G  1.7G  1.7G  50% /
>> tmpfs           245M     0  245M   0% /dev/shm
>> tmpfs           5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
>> tmpfs           245M     0  245M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
>>
>> This is a Debian 8 IOT images, and about half of the storage is used. 
>>  Plenty for more stuff!
>>
>> The only thing I can think of is to run the partition expander script:
>>
>> sudo /opt/scripts/tools/grow_partition.sh
>>
>> Check before and after running above script.  I hope it helps, but no 
>> promises.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Greg
>>
>

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