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Date:      Mon, 03 Jun 2002 23:01:32 -0400
From:      Bill Moran <wmoran@potentialtech.com>
To:        Drew Tomlinson <drew@mykitchentable.net>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Drive Space - Am I Getting All I Should?
Message-ID:  <3CFC2D8C.5000906@potentialtech.com>
References:  <003101c20b3e$13a0d320$0301a8c0@bigdaddy>

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Drew Tomlinson wrote:
> I added a 80G IDE drive to my 4.5 machine.  I used /stand/sysinstall
> to FDisk and Label the drive.  Now after mounting, df -h shows:
> 
> Filesystem        Size   Used  Avail Capacity  Mounted on
> /dev/ad0s1e        72G   1.0K    66G     0%    /ftp
> 
> dmesg shows the drive as 76319M so 72G seems reasonable:
> 
> ad0: 76319MB <GENERIC GENERIC> [155061/16/63] at ata0-master UDMA33
> 
> The /stand/sysinstall disklabel editor sees it as the same size:
> 
> Part      Mount           Size Newfs  Part      Mount           Size
> Newfs
> ----      -----           ---- -----  ----      -----           ---- -
> ----
> ad0s1e    /ftp         76319MB UFS Y
> 
> But the FDISK partition editor sees the drive geometry differently
> than dmesg:
> 
> Disk name:      ad0                                    FDISK Partition
> Editor
> DISK Geometry:  30629 cyls/81 heads/63 sectors = 156299787 sectors
> 
>     Offset       Size        End     Name  PType       Desc  Subtype
> Flags
> 
>          0  156301488  156301487    ad0s1      3    freebsd      165
> C>
> 
> So how come df -h only shows 66G available?  Where's the other 6G?  Is
> this some limitation of FBSD or my system BIOS?

If this isn't in the FAQ, it should be.  It's in certain man pages.
The short answer is:  Filesystem performance degrades very badly when
a filesystem is more than 92% full, so the OS reserves 8% of the drive
to keep performance reasonable.  Only the root user can fill the disk
more than 92%
This is only a default value.  You can change the reserved space on a
drive with either tunefs or with options when you newfs it.  I don't
recommend it, though.  The 8% thing was heavily researched and if you
fill a drive fuller than that, saving data to it is going to take
forever.

-- 
Bill Moran
Potential Technology
http://www.potentialtech.com


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