Introduction
Linux df command can be used to display
disk usage statistics for the file systems present on the Linux system.
It’s handy tool to know which filesystem is consuming how much memory.
Also, if a particular filename is picked up and supplied as argument to
df command then it displays the disk usage statistics for the file
system on which the file resides.
This command can be used by the system
administrators to know the disk usage status of various file systems on
Linux so that proper clean-up and maintenance of the Linux system can be
performed. The df command provides various options through which the
output can be customized in a way that is most suited to the user.
Syntax
Before jumping on to the examples, lets
first take a look on how to use the df command. Here is the syntax
information of df command from the man page:
df [OPTION]... [FILE]... |
So we see that the df command does not
require any mandatory argument. The OPTION and FILE arguments are
non-mandatory. While the OPTION argument tells the df command to act in a
way as specified by the definition of that OPTION, the FILE argument
tells the df command to print disk usage of only that file system on
which the FILE resides.
NOTE: for those who are new to this type of syntax information, any argument specified in square brackets [] are non-mandatory.
Examples
1. Basic example
Here is how the df command can be used in its most basic form.
# df Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda6 29640780 4320704 23814388 16% / udev 1536756 4 1536752 1% /dev tmpfs 617620 888 616732 1% /run none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock none 1544044 156 1543888 1% /run/shm |
In the output above, the disk usage
statistics of all the file systems were displayed when the df command
was run without any argument.
The first column specifies the file
system name, the second column specifies the total memory for a
particular file system in units of 1k-blocks where 1k is 1024 bytes.
Used and available columns specify the amount of memory that is in use
and is free respectively. The use column specifies the used memory in
percentage while the final column ‘Mounted on’ specifies the mount point
of a file system.
2. Get the disk usage of file system through a file
As already discussed in the
introduction, df can display the disk usage information of a file system
if any file residing on that file system is supplied as an argument to
it.
Here is an example:
# df test Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda6 29640780 4320600 23814492 16% / |
Here is another example:
# df groff.txt Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda6 29640780 4320600 23814492 16% / |
We used two different files (residing on
same file system) as argument to df command. The output confirms that
the df command displays the disk usage of file system on which a file
resides.
3. Display inode information
There exists an option -i through which the output of the df command displays the inode information instead of block usage.
For example:
# df -i Filesystem Inodes IUsed IFree IUse% Mounted on /dev/sda6 1884160 261964 1622196 14% / udev 212748 560 212188 1% /dev tmpfs 216392 477 215915 1% /run none 216392 3 216389 1% /run/lock none 216392 8 216384 1% /run/shm |
As we can see in the output above, the inode related information was displayed for each filesystem.
4. Produce a grand total
There exists an option –total through
which the output displays an additional row at the end of the output
which produces a total for every column.
Here is an example:
# df --total Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/sda6 29640780 4320720 23814372 16% / udev 1536756 4 1536752 1% /dev tmpfs 617620 892 616728 1% /run none 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock none 1544044 156 1543888 1% /run/shm total 33344320 4321772 27516860 14% |
So we see that the output contains an extra row towards the end of the output and displays total for each column.
5. Produce output in human readable format
There exists an option -h through which the output of df command can be produced in a human readable format.
Here is an example:
# df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda6 29G 4.2G 23G 16% / udev 1.5G 4.0K 1.5G 1% /dev tmpfs 604M 892K 603M 1% /run none 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock none 1.5G 156K 1.5G 1% /run/shm |
So we can see that the output displays
the figures in form of ‘G’ (gigabytes), ‘M’ (megabytes) and ‘K’
(kilobytes). This makes the output easy to read and comprehend and thus
makes is human readable. Note that the name of the second column is also
changed to ‘size’ in order to make it human readable.
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