Great, thanks a lot Tyler!
It really helps understanding the rules.
Cheers.
Tyler MacDonald wrote:
Michael Yang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
physically missing. I used "df -h", it returns to me with the follows:
/dev/sda8 19G 334M 18G 2% /home
When I used "du -sh /home", it returns to me with the actual used spaces:
162M /home
I'm not 100% sure on this... but I have noticed the same thing on my
system... I think it may be extra space used for the filesystem journal. Eg;
my /boot partition is only using 19 megs, but it claims to be using 23.
Okay, so I'm curious too, so I'm going to test it now.
I remove my journal from /boot (umount it, then tune2fs -O ^has_journal
/dev/hda1), and I get:
# df -h /boot
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda1 38M 19M 18M 53% /boot
Then re-add the journal (tune2fs -j /dev/hda1) and I get:
# df -h /boot
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda1 38M 23M 14M 64% /boot
I suggest keeping the journal around. :-)
One other thing to note: all ext2/ext3 filesystems are created with 5% of
the free disk space reserved for root. That is, once there is only 5% of the
disk space free, the partition will show as "100%" used and only root can
continue writing to it. This makes sense for "/", "/var", etc... it might
not make so much sense for /home. You can get an immediate 5% free space
gain by running:
tune2fs -m0 /dev/hdwhatever
Hope this helps,
Tyler
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