So I found an approximate 750MB in a directory under the /backup mount
point. Removed that and ended up with sane numbers:
grits# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd0a 986M 166M 771M 18% /
/dev/sd0k 57.7G 25.9G 29.0G 47% /home
/dev/sd0d 3.9G 10.0K 3.7G 0% /tmp
/dev/sd0f 5.8G 1.1G 4.4G 21% /usr
/dev/sd0g 986M 234M 702M 25% /usr/X11R6
/dev/sd0h 16.8G 35.5M 15.9G 0% /usr/local
/dev/sd0j 5.8G 2.0K 5.5G 0% /usr/obj
/dev/sd0i 1.9G 2.0K 1.8G 0% /usr/src
/dev/sd0e 13.8G 18.8M 13.1G 0% /var
/dev/sd1c 440G 306G 112G 73% /backup
grits# du -sxh /
166M /
On Wed, Aug 4, 2021 at 5:30 PM Jay Hart <jhart@kevla.org> wrote:
> For those of us following along, could you post the final disk usage?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jay
>
> > Thank you Todd. And I'm sorry to Paul for not reading his post more
> > thoroughly regarding the mount points.
> >
> > At some point my rsync script ran while /backup wasn't mounted or
> > something. The culprit was there.
> >
> > On Wed, Aug 4, 2021 at 1:41 PM Todd C. Miller <Todd.Miller@sudo.ws>
> wrote:
> >
> >> On Wed, 04 Aug 2021 13:32:54 -0700, Greg Thomas wrote:
> >>
> >> > I'm at a loss, I booted in single user mode, ran fsck on /dev/sd0a
> and it
> >> > shows clean. I still have a large discrepancy between df and du.
> >>
> >> Did you verify that nothing was hiding under the mount points? For
> >> example, when booted in single user mode with only the root partition
> >> mounted the /tmp, /home, /var, /usr and /backup directories should
> >> be empty.
> >>
> >> - todd
> >>
> >
>
>
>
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