Darren Dunham 15 January 2008 21:59:31 [ permanent link ]
FiLH <filh@filh.org> wrote:
Hello,
We have a strange behaviour :
On a file system (this time it's a root one, but I have seen it on an
/opt mounted one), there is something like 2.2 free space (df result).
What is 2.2? Percent?
Check for free blocks in the filesystem.
Run 'fstyp -v <filesystem>' and look for the 'nblocks' field. If it's zero, you have free space, but none of the space is in an allocateable block.
-- Darren Dunham ddunham@taos.com Senior Technical Consultant TAOS http://www.taos.com/ Got some Dr Pepper? San Francisco, CA bay area < This line left intentionally blank to confuse you. >
Darren Dunham 16 January 2008 20:49:26 [ permanent link ]
FiLH <filh@filh.org> wrote:
ddunham@taos.com (Darren Dunham) writes:
On a file system (this time it's a root one, but I have seen it on an
/opt mounted one), there is something like 2.2 free space (df result).
What is 2.2? Percent?
Oups Go.
I'm sorry, but that line makes even less sense to me.
Run 'fstyp -v <filesystem>' and look for the 'nblocks' field. If it's
zero, you have free space, but none of the space is in an allocateable
block.
Thanks... I will look at that next time (we were in hurry, so we
removed some files).
You can still look at it and see if it's low. It'll let you know if it's likely to return.
-- Darren Dunham ddunham@taos.com Senior Technical Consultant TAOS http://www.taos.com/ Got some Dr Pepper? San Francisco, CA bay area < This line left intentionally blank to confuse you. >
Neal A. Lucier 17 January 2008 00:19:32 [ permanent link ]
Darren Dunham wrote:
FiLH <filh@filh.org> wrote:
ddunham@taos.com (Darren Dunham) writes:
On a file system (this time it's a root one, but I have seen it on an
/opt mounted one), there is something like 2.2 free space (df result).
What is 2.2? Percent?
Oups Go.
I'm sorry, but that line makes even less sense to me.
From checking out the OP's website, they seem to be a native french speaker, and if I'm not mistaken the onomatopoeia that a ship makes as it sinks is slightly different than in english; it's more a "gloo gloo" noise than "glug glug". And I think he was attempting to express that sound.
I interpreted it as "Oops, I'm sinking into shame cause it really was precent".
I haven't written or spoken that much French since I stopped living in France, and I'm not a native speaker, so these are just musings.
Neal A. Lucier 17 January 2008 00:24:59 [ permanent link ]
Neal A. Lucier wrote:
Darren Dunham wrote:
FiLH <filh@filh.org> wrote:
ddunham@taos.com (Darren Dunham) writes:
On a file system (this time it's a root one, but I have seen it on an
/opt mounted one), there is something like 2.2 free space (df result).
What is 2.2? Percent?
Oups Go.
I'm sorry, but that line makes even less sense to me.
From checking out the OP's website, they seem to be a native french
speaker, and if I'm not mistaken the onomatopoeia that a ship makes as
it sinks is slightly different than in english; it's more a "gloo gloo"
noise than "glug glug". And I think he was attempting to express that
sound.
I interpreted it as "Oops, I'm sinking into shame cause it really was
precent".
I haven't written or spoken that much French since I stopped living in
France, and I'm not a native speaker, so these are just musings.
Of course after pondering french-english onomatopoeias the answer becomes obvious immediately after hitting "send".
The term Go is used in french to mean GB. The first google hit for "go gb" returns a page in french that implies that the Go term comes from giga-octets since a byte is 8 bits.
"Neal A. Lucier" <nlucier@math.purdue.edu> writes:
Darren Dunham wrote:
FiLH <filh@filh.org> wrote:
ddunham@taos.com (Darren Dunham) writes:
On a file system (this time it's a root one, but I have seen it on an
/opt mounted one), there is something like 2.2 free space (df result).
What is 2.2? Percent?
Oups Go.
I'm sorry, but that line makes even less sense to me.
From checking out the OP's website, they seem to be a native french
speaker, and if I'm not mistaken the onomatopoeia that a ship makes as
it sinks is slightly different than in english; it's more a "gloo
gloo" noise than "glug glug". And I think he was attempting to
express that sound.
That's an interesting explanation ! But... since Napoleon we have no more real ships, all the european ships are english ! So... No french ship has ever sunk for the las 200h years.
Maybe that's the sound of or president that wants to go go go everywhere....
I interpreted it as "Oops, I'm sinking into shame cause it really was precent".