Hello, That's a feature. >> /dev/hdb1 10078820 4932492 4634344 52% / >> ... >> In the first filesystem line e.g., there is a usage of 4932492 blocks >> against 10078820 number of blocks in the filesystem, this are rounded >> 49% and not 52%. It seems that the "use%" is taken from another data >> source than from "Used/1K-blocks". I take an empty filesystem, I fill it with zeros: # df -k /a /dev/sda10 14017840 165992 13139772 2% /a # dd if=/dev/zero of=/a/MMM bs=10485760 & # df -k /a /dev/sda10 14017840 13312940 0 100% /a ... # df -k /a /dev/sda10 14017840 13424820 0 100% /a ... # df -k /a /dev/sda10 14017840 14015096 0 100% /a Strange, you get 100% when Used is 13312940, or 13424820, or 14015096. Explanation: man mke2fs, option -m: -m reserved-blocks-percentage Specify the percentage of the filesystem blocks reserved for the super-user. This avoids fragmentation, and allows root-owned dae- mons, such as syslogd(8), to continue to function correctly after non-privileged processes are prevented from writing to the filesys- tem. The default percentage is 5%. So 5% is reserved to accelerate I/O. And a filesystem is full when it gets 105%. But only root can bypass 100%. For other Unix, default 5% can be 10% (FreeBSD), or vary from 1 to 10% (depending on the filesystem size) in Solaris. tune2fs(8) can change this value. -- Jacques Beigbeder | Jacques.Beigbeder@xxxxxx Service de Prestations Informatiques | http://www.spi.ens.fr Ecole normale supérieure | 45 rue d'Ulm |Tel : (+33 1)1 44 32 37 96 F75230 Paris cedex 05 |Fax : (+33 1)1 44 32 20 75