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di(1) DragonFly General Commands Manual di(1)
Name
di - disk information
Synopsis
di [-AacghHklLmnPqRtZ] [-B block-size] [-d display-size] [-f format]
[-I include-fstyp-list] [-s sort-type] [-w block-width] [-W
inode-width] [-x exclude-fstyp-list] [-X debug-level] [-z zone-name]
[file [...]]
mi
Description
di Displays usage information on mounted filesystems. Block values are
reported in a human readable format. If the user or group has a disk
quota, the values reported are adjusted according the quotas that apply
to the user.
If file is specified, the usage information for the partition on which
file is located is printed.
Unless the -a flag is specified, the following mounted filesystems will
not normally be displayed: filesystems with total space <= 0; loopback
filesystems that are duplicates of other normally mounted filesystems
(filesystem type of 'lofs' , 'none', or 'nullfs'); loopback filesystems
that are part of a zone (Solaris).
Filesystems that the user does not have permissions to access will not
be displayed at all.
mi Displays the mounted filesystem information.
Several options may be specified to control the output of di and mi:
-A Print all fields (used for debugging). Mount points and special
device names are printed at full width.
-a (compatibility: --all)
Prints all mounted devices (normally, those with 0 total space
are not printed - e.g. /dev/proc, /dev/fd).
-B block-size (compatibility: --block-size, -b)
Change the base block size from 1024 (default) to the size
specified. block-size may be one of: k - 1024 bytes, si - 1000
bytes, or a specific size.
-c (alias: --csv-output)
Comma separated values are output. The titles are output as the
format string specifiers. Totals are turned off. See also the
-n flag.
-d display-size (alias: --display-size)
Display the usage in units specified by display-size. Note that
if the base block size is SI units of 1000 bytes, the display
size is calculated using those units. display-size may be one
of: 512 - POSIX, k - kilobytes, m - megabytes, g - gigabytes,
t - terabytes, p - petabytes, e - exabytes, z - zettabytes,
y - yottabytes, h - Scaled alternative 1, H - Scaled alternative
2, or a specific value to use as the block size.
Block display sizes greater than 1024 bytes are displayed with a
precision of one decimal place after the radix.
The Scaled alternatives scale the sizes displayed and appends a
suffix (e.g. 48.0k, 3.4M).
With scaled alternative 1, sizes within a line may scale to
different units.
Scaled alternative 2 scales all the sizes in each individual
line to the same unit size (the largest needed).
-f format Use the specified format string format. See the Format
Strings section.
-g (alias for: -dg)
Display sizes in gigabytes.
-h (alias for: -dh)
Display partition sizes in scaled alternative 1 format.
--help
Display some basic usage information.
-H (alias for: -dH; compatibility: --human-readable)
Display partition sizes in scaled alternative 2 format.
-I include-fstype-list (compatibility: -F, --type)
Include only the file system types listed in include-fstyp-list.
The list is a comma separated list of file system types.
Multiple -I options may be specified. If the 'fuse' filesystem
type is specified, all fuse* filesystems will be included.
e.g. -I nfs,tmpfs or -I nfs -I tmpfs.
--inodes
Ignored. Use the -f option.
-k (alias for: -dk)
Display sizes in Kbytes.
-l (compatibility: --local)
Display only local file systems.
-L Turn off check for duplicate filesystems (loopback (lofs/none)
mounts).
-m (alias for: -dm)
Display sizes in megabytes.
-n Do not print a header line above the list of file systems.
Useful when parsing the output of di.
--no-sync
Ignored.
-P (compatibility: --portability)
Output format is POSIX standard. 512 byte block size is the
default. The -k option may be used.
--print-type
Ignored. Use the -f option.
-q Disable quota checks.
-R (also: --dont-resolve-symlinks)
Do not resolve symlinks (for mount points that have a trailing
UUID).
-s sort-type
Use sort-type to sort the output. The output of di is normally
sorted by mount point. The following sort flags may be used to
change the sort order: m - by mount point (default); n - leave
unsorted (as it appears in the mount table); s - by special
device name; t - by filesystem type; r - reverse the sort order.
These sort options may be combined in any order. e.g.: di
-stsrm - by type, special, reversed mount; di -strsrm - by type,
reversed special, mount.
--si An alias for -dH -Bsi.
--sync Ignored.
-t (compatibility: --total)
Print a totals line below the list of file systems. Pooled
filesystems (zfs, advfs) have only the main pool added to the
total. It is up to the user to exclude (using the -x option)
read-only filesystems (cdfs, iso9660), swap-based (memfs, mfs,
tmpfs) filesystems and user (fuse*) filesystems. Excluding the
'fuse' filesystem will exclude all fuse* filesystems.
-w block-width
Set the print width for block values. The default is eight.
-v Ignored.
--version
Display di's version and default format string.
-W inode-width
Set the print width for inode values. Default is seven.
-x exclude-fstype-list (compatibility: --exclude-type)
Exclude the file system types listed in exclude-fstyp-list. The
list is a comma separated list of file system types. Multiple
-x options may be specified. If the 'fuse' filesystem type is
excluded, all fuse* filesystems will be excluded. e.g. -x
nfs,tmpfs or -x nfs -x tmpfs.
-X level
Set the program's debugging level to debug-level.
-z zone-name
Display the filesystems for the specified zone. The zone must
be visible to the user.
-Z (alias for: -z all)
Display the filesystems for all visible zones.
Format Strings
The output of di may be specified via a format string. This string may
be given either via the -f command line option or as part of the
DI_ARGS environment variable. The format string may specify the
following columns:
m Print the name of the mount point.
M Print the name of the mount point, at full length. The mount
point is formatted to the maximum width necessary for the
longest mount point name.
s Print the file system name (special device or remote mount
point).
S Print the file system name (special device or remote mount
point), at full length. The file system name is formatted to
the maximum width necessary for the longest file system name.
t Print the file system type.
T Print the file system type at full length. The file system type
is formatted to the maximum width necessary for the longest file
system type.
Total Available
b Print the total number of megabytes on the file system.
B Print the total number of megabytes on the file system available
for use by normal users.
In Use
u Print the number of megabytes in use on the file system (actual
number of megabytes used = total - free).
c Print the number of megabytes not available for use by normal
users (total - available).
Free
f Print the number of free (unused) megabytes on the file system.
v Print the number of megabytes available for use by normal users.
Percentage Used
p Print the percentage of megabytes not available for use by
normal users (number of megabytes not available for use / total
disk space).
1 Print the percentage of total megabytes in use (actual number of
megabytes used / total disk space).
2 Print the percentage of megabytes in use, BSD-style. Represents
the percentage of user-available space in use. Note that values
over 100% are possible (actual number of megabytes used / disk
space available to non-root users).
Percentage Free
a Print the percentage of megabytes available for use by normal
users (number of megabytes available for use / total disk
space).
3 Print the percentage of total megabytes free (actual number of
megabytes free / total disk space).
Inodes
i Print the total number of file slots (inodes) that can be
created on the file system.
U Print the number of file slots in use.
F Print the number of file slots available.
P Print the percentage of file slots in use.
Mount Information
I Print the time the filesystem was mounted. This column is not
supported on all systems.
O Print the filesystem mount options.
The default format string for di is smbuvpT.
The default format string for mi is MSTIO.
The format string may also contain any other character not listed
above. The character will be printed as is. e.g. di -f 'mbuvp|iUFP'
will print the character '|' between the disk usage and the file slot
usage. The command sequence:
di -f 'mbuvp
miUFP'
will print two lines of data for each filesystem.
Examples
Various df equivalent format strings for System V release 4 are:
/usr/bin/df -v di -P -f msbuf1
/usr/bin/df -k di -dk -f sbcvpm
/usr/ucb/df di -dk -f sbuv2m
GNU df:
df di -dk -f SbuvpM -w 10
df -T di -dk -f STbuvpM -w 10
AIX df:
df di -d 512 -f Sbf1UPM -w 10
df -I di -d 512 -f Sbuf1M
df -I -M di -d 512 -f SMbuf1 -w 10
HP-UX bdf:
bdf di -d k -f Sbuv2M
bdf -i di -d k -f Sbuv2UFPM
If you like your numbers to add up/calculate the percentage correctly,
try one of the following format strings:
di -f SMbuf1T
di -f SMbcvpT
di -f SMBuv2T
Environment Variables
The DI_ARGS environment variable may be used to specify command line
arguments. e.g. If you always want gigabytes displayed, set DI_ARGS
equal to "-dg". Any command line arguments specified will override the
DI_ARGS environment variable.
The DI_LOCALE_DIR environment variable may be used to specify the
location of the di program's locale message files.
The GNU df POSIXLY_CORRECT, and DF_BLOCK_SIZE and the BSD BLOCKSIZE
environment variables are honored.
Note
For filesystems that do not report available space (e.g. System V
release 3), the number of available space is set to the free space.
WARNING
Do not replace your system's df command with this program. You will in
all likelihood break your installation procedures.
See Also
df(1), fstab(5), getmnt(2), getmntinfo(2), mnttab(4), mount(1M)
statfs(2), statvfs(2)
Bugs
Send bug reports to: brad.lanam.di_at_gmail.com
Website
http://www.gentoo.com/di/
Author
This program is Copyright 1994-2011 by Brad Lanam.
Brad Lanam, Walnut Creek, CA (brad.lanam.di_at_gmail.com)
17 Jan 2013 di(1)