Difference between revisions of "Disks and filesystems"

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;df -i
 
;df -i
 
:Show filesystem inode usage
 
:Show filesystem inode usage
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 +
;df -P
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:Report file-system information in parseble format.
 +
 +
;du -shx *
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:Report disk usage for all files and directories in the current directory. Do not count files on other filesystems (-x) and do not follow symbolic links (default)
  
 
;ls -i <file>
 
;ls -i <file>

Revision as of 11:44, 12 January 2021

badblocks -v- s /dev/sdb >badblocks.log
Check a device for bad blocks
fdisk /dev/sdb
Manage disk partitions
df -h
Show filesystem block usage in human friendly format
df -i
Show filesystem inode usage
df -P
Report file-system information in parseble format.
du -shx *
Report disk usage for all files and directories in the current directory. Do not count files on other filesystems (-x) and do not follow symbolic links (default)
ls -i <file>
Show inode of <file>
rm -i <file>
Remove a file by its inode
mount -t <fstype> -o <options> <devicefile> <mountpoint>
Mount a filesystem (fstype and options can be omitted often)
mount -o loop /path/to/my-iso-image.iso /mnt/iso
Mount an .iso file


Performance

The graphical utility Disks has a benchmark option.

dd if=/dev/zero of=./test.tmp bs=1G count=1 oflag=dsync;rm -f ./test.tmp
Check plain write speed
dd if=/dev/zero of=./test.tmp bs=512 count=1000 oflag=dsync;rm -f ./test.tmp
Latency test

On an empty disk you can do:

dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdb bs=8k count=10k
Test disk write speed if no filesystem exists

Misc

/dev/null
The unix black hole. Write always succeeds with no effect at all.
/dev/zero
Provides an unlimited amount of null characters (ASCII 0). Can be used for cleaning disks or benchmarking (see #Performance)
Writing to /dev/zero is the same as writing to /dev/null