>From what I can tell, this works fine for me in trusty, even when the
same device is mounted more than once (which as per #7 seems to be the
root cause of this problem)
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This issue persists in version 3.8.2 on Ubuntu 13.10. This was avoided once
when an option to forbid filesystem border crossing was introduced which has
been removed again later. This option suppressed the malious behavior to
include files which are bound or mounted.
In order to fix rather than
Looks like I have the same issue.
administrator@delta-one:~$ df -a
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda3 96122052 3994724 87244516 5% /
proc 0 0 0 - /proc
none 0 0
Let's extract the important numbers from #2's Screenshot.png: 294.9
total, 154.4 used, 140.6 free
Looking at the output of df, I can see *three* things which are
non-tmpfs/procfs/sysfs/devfs:
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/host/ubuntu/disks/root.disk
I'm having the same problem with Baobab 2.28.1 on Ubuntu 9.10.
Nautilus reports 4.3GB available and 'df -h' command report 4.4GB
available. Boabab says I have 5.7GB available.
The reason for this is in confusion over the terms 'free space' and
'available space'.
If you run System Monitor and cli
Baobab reports wrong disk free/used space report. See attatched
screenshot with df -h and baobab.
I'am on jaunty.
cat /etc/debian_version
5.0
** Attachment added: "Wrong disk usage report."
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/28596964/baobab-wrong-disk-usage-report.png
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df -a contradicts Disk
I am having a similar issue with 9.04 AMD64 and Disk Usage Analyser.
When I do a 'Scan Filesystem' from Disk Usage Analyser it shows "Total
filesystem capacity:"... which are accurate and match df -h, but the
folder breakdown is vastly different from the above - Whilst the real
disk usage is over
Looking at the attachments in this bug report, I noticed that "Disk
usage analyzer screenshot" was flagged as a patch. A patch contains
changes to an Ubuntu package that will resolve a bug, since this was not
one I've unchecked the patch flag for it. In the future keep in mind
the definition of a