On Wed Oct 19 11, Alexander Best wrote: > On Wed Oct 19 11, Chuck Swiger wrote: > > On Oct 19, 2011, at 12:34 PM, Alexander Best wrote: > > > the du(1) man page states the following: > > > > > > " > > > -B blocksize > > > Calculate block counts in blocksize byte blocks. This is > > > differ- > > > ent from the -k, -m options or setting BLOCKSIZE and gives an > > > estimate of how much space the examined file hierarchy would > > > require on a filesystem with the given blocksize. Unless in > > > -A > > > mode, blocksize is rounded up to the next multiple of 512. > > > " > > > > > > is this a doc bug, or does du(1) really always assume that every > > > filesystem's > > > blocksize == 512? > > > > The default blocksize is 512 bytes. > > > > The -B option flag lets you tell du to assume a different filesystem > > blocksize. > > so when running freebsd on a hdd with a blocksize of 4k, a simple 'du -h' will > always display incorrect results, unless '-B 4096' was also specified? isn't > there a way to automatically query the blocksize of the underlying device, > instead of always asuming the blocksize is 512 byte?
...also: since -A is supposed to take the actual file size into account and not the blocksize of the underlying filesystem, shouldn't the output of 'du -A -B4096' and 'du -A' be the same? just tested this on freebsd 7 and freebsd 10 and the outputs differ. cheers. alex > > cheers. > alex > > > > > Regards, > > -- > > -Chuck > > _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[email protected]"
