At 2007-10-29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] expressed thier undying love for me by saying: > On Mon, 29 Oct 2007 16:52:12 -0500, Korthrun wrote: > >> I'm writing some scripts to populate RRD's, mainly for practicing python. >> >> As such I've decided to play with statvfs in order to build disk >> graphs. Here is what I have and what I get. What I'm curious about >> here is the meaning of the "L" charcter, as that fubars math. > > The L means its a `long` literal, i.e. an integer value that can be > arbitrary big. Well its limited by memory of course. > > And it doesn't "fubar" math, the L just shows up in the string > representation but you don't calculate with strings but numbers. > >> ###start code### >> >> from os import statvfs, path >> from statvfs import * >> >> mps = [ '/', '/home', '/www', '/var', '/storage/backups', >> '/storage/snd' ] >> >> for fs in mps: >> data = statvfs(fs) >> print data >> >> ###end code, start output### >> (4096, 4096, 4883593L, 4045793L, 4045793L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 1024, 255) >> (4096, 4096, 1220889L, 1114718L, 1114718L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 0, 255) >> (4096, 4096, 19267346L, 18273138L, 18273138L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 0, 255) >> (4096, 4096, 3662687L, 3492397L, 3492397L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 0, 255) >> (4096, 4096, 3417702L, 2116063L, 2116063L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 0, 255) >> (4096, 4096, 25885944L, 21799115L, 21799115L, 0L, 0L, 0L, 0, 255) >> ###end output### >> >> Ideally I'll just do some blocksize * number of blocks math to get >> the % of used space. > > Just go ahead and do it: > > In [185]: stat = os.statvfs('/') > > In [186]: stat.f_bsize > Out[186]: 4096 > > In [187]: stat.f_blocks > Out[187]: 2622526L > > In [188]: stat.f_bsize * stat.f_blocks > Out[188]: 10741866496L > > Ciao, > Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch Thanks for the response, I'll have to play with it more, as I'm obviously misunderstanding the error that I'm getting. I didn't include the part of the script that did the math, as it wasn't important to my base question.
I was getting TypeError: "sequence index must be integer", so I thought the L was making python see it as a string. Thanks for the insight Josh -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list