09.10.2016 17:52, Ben Hutchings пишет:
Have you run fsck over these filesystems recently?
Yes, last was a few days ago. If I run fsck over these filesystems, du
and df show the same used space.
On Sun, 2016-10-09 at 17:20 +0300, Андрей Василишин wrote:
> 09.10.2016 17:04, Ben Hutchings пишет:
> > Control: tag -1 moreinfo
> >
> > On Sun, 2016-10-09 at 14:26 +0300, Андрей Василишин wrote:
> > > Package: linux-image-3.16.0-4-amd64
> > > Version: 3.16.36-1+deb8u1
> > >
> > > Hello!
> > >
09.10.2016 17:04, Ben Hutchings пишет:
Control: tag -1 moreinfo
On Sun, 2016-10-09 at 14:26 +0300, Андрей Василишин wrote:
Package: linux-image-3.16.0-4-amd64
Version: 3.16.36-1+deb8u1
Hello!
Usually df -h and du -hs shows the same used space.
That's not generally true, due to metadata
Control: tag -1 moreinfo
On Sun, 2016-10-09 at 14:26 +0300, Андрей Василишин wrote:
> Package: linux-image-3.16.0-4-amd64
> Version: 3.16.36-1+deb8u1
>
> Hello!
> Usually df -h and du -hs shows the same used space.
That's not generally true, due to metadata that du isn't aware of. I
don't
Package: linux-image-3.16.0-4-amd64
Version: 3.16.36-1+deb8u1
Hello!
Usually df -h and du -hs shows the same used space. But now I have a
problem. I am using two SSD for a cache. Script using df command, all
time writes and deletes files. There are no such problem with wheezy
kernels.
df
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