26.3. File Systems

The df command reports the system's disk space usage. If you type the command df at a shell prompt, the output looks similar to the following:

Filesystem           1k-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda2             10325716   2902060   6899140  30% /
/dev/hda1                15554      8656      6095  59% /boot
/dev/hda3             20722644   2664256  17005732  14% /home
none                    256796         0    256796   0% /dev/shm

By default, this utility shows the partition size in 1 kilobyte blocks and the amount of used and available disk space in kilobytes. To view the information in megabytes and gigabytes, use the command df -h. The -h argument stands for human-readable format. The output looks similar to the following:

Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda2             9.8G  2.8G  6.5G  30% /
/dev/hda1              15M  8.5M  5.9M  59% /boot
/dev/hda3              20G  2.6G   16G  14% /home
none                  251M     0  250M   0% /dev/shm

In the list of partitions, there is an entry for /dev/shm. This entry represents the system's virtual memory file system.

The du command displays the estimated amount of space being used by files in a directory. If you type du at a shell prompt, the disk usage for each of the subdirectories will be displayed in a list. The grand total for the current directory and subdirectories will also be shown as the last line in the list. If you do not want to see the totals for all the subdirectories, use the command du -hs to see only the grand total for the directory in human-readable format. Use the du --help command to see more options.

To view the system's partitions and disk space usage in a graphical format, use the System Monitor tab as shown at the bottom of Figure 26-2.

TipTip
 

For information on implementing disk quotas, refer to Chapter 6 Implementing Disk Quotas.

26.3.1. Monitoring File Systems

Red Hat Linux provides a utility called diskcheck that monitors the amount of free disk space on the system. Based on the configuration file, it will send email to the system administrator when one or more disk drives reach a specified capacity. To use this utility, you must have the diskcheck RPM package installed.

This utility is run as an hourly cron [1] task.

The following variables can be defined in /etc/diskcheck.conf:

You do not have to restart a service if you change the configuration file because it is read each time the cron task is run. You must have the crond service running for cron tasks to be executed. To determine if the daemon is running, use the command /sbin/service crond status. It is recommended that you start the service at boot time. Refer to Chapter 14 Controlling Access to Services for details on starting the cron service automatically at boot time.

Notes

[1]

Refer to Chapter 28 Automated Tasks for more information on cron.