- Examining File Systems When the df command is run without arguments, it reports total disk space, used disk space, free disk space, and the percentage of the total disk space used on all mounted regular file systems. The following example displays the file systems and mount points on host.
[user@host ~]$ df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
devtmpfs 912584 0 912584 0% /dev
tmpfs 936516 0 936516 0% /dev/shm
tmpfs 936516 16812 919704 2% /run
tmpfs 936516 0 936516 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/vda3 8377344 1411332 6966012 17% /
/dev/vda1 1038336 169896 868440 17% /boot
tmpfs 187300 0 187300 0% /run/user/1000
The du command shows the size of all files in the current directory tree recursively.
Show a disk usage report for the /usr/share directory on host:
[root@host ~]# du /usr/share
...output omitted...
176 /usr/share/smartmontools
184 /usr/share/nano
8 /usr/share/cmake/bash-completion
8 /usr/share/cmake
356676 /usr/share
- Identifying the Block Device Use the lsblk command to list the details of a specified block device or all the available devices.
[root@host ~]# lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
vda 253:0 0 12G 0 disk
├─vda1 253:1 0 1G 0 part /boot
├─vda2 253:2 0 1G 0 part [SWAP]
└─vda3 253:3 0 11G 0 part /
vdb 253:16 0 64G 0 disk
└─vdb1 253:17 0 64G 0 part
- Mounting by Block Device Name The following example mounts the file system in the /dev/vdb1 partition on the directory /mnt/data.
[root@host ~]# mount /dev/vdb1 /mnt/data
- Mounting by File-system UUID The lsblk -fp command lists the full path of the device, along with the UUIDs and mount points, as well as the type of file system in the partition.
[root@host ~]# lsblk -fp
NAME FSTYPE LABEL UUID MOUNTPOINT
/dev/vda
├─/dev/vda1 xfs 23ea8803-a396-494a-8e95-1538a53b821c /boot
├─/dev/vda2 swap cdf61ded-534c-4bd6-b458-cab18b1a72ea [SWAP]
└─/dev/vda3 xfs 44330f15-2f9d-4745-ae2e-20844f22762d /
/dev/vdb
└─/dev/vdb1 xfs 46f543fd-78c9-4526-a857-244811be2d88
- Unmounting File Systems To unmount a file system, the umount command expects the mount point as an argument.
[root@host ~]# umount /mnt/data
- Searching for Files This section discusses two commands that can search for files in the file-system hierarchy.
The locate command searches a pregenerated index for file names or file paths and returns the results instantly.
The find command searches for files in real time by crawling through the file-system hierarchy.
Locating Files by Name
The locate command finds files based on the name or path to the file.
The locate database is automatically updated every day. However, at any time the root user can issue the updatedb command to force an immediate update.
[root@host ~]# updatedb
The locate command restricts results for unprivileged users.
Search for files with passwd in the name or path in directory trees readable by user on host.
[user@host ~]$ locate passwd
/etc/passwd
/etc/passwd-
/etc/pam.d/passwd
/etc/security/opasswd
/usr/bin/gpasswd
/usr/bin/grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2
/usr/bin/lppasswd
/usr/bin/passwd
...output omitted...
Searching for Files in Real Time
The first argument to the find command is the directory to search.
For example, to search for files named sshd_config starting from the / directory, run the following command:
[root@host ~]# find / -name sshd_config
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
- Searching Files Based on Ownership or Permission Search for files owned by user in the /home/user directory on host.
[user@host ~]$ find -user user
.
./.bash_logout
./.bash_profile
./.bashrc
./.bash_history
- Searching Files Based on Size The example below shows how to search for files with a size of 10 megabytes, rounded up.
[user@host ~]$ find -size 10M
- Searching Files Based on Modification Time To find all files that had their file content changed 120 minutes ago on host, run:
[root@host ~]# find / -mmin 120
Searching Files Based on File Type
Use the following list to pass the required flags to limit the scope of search:f, for regular file
d, for directory
l, for soft link
b, for block device
Search for all directories in the /etc directory on host.
[root@host ~]# find /etc -type d
/etc
/etc/tmpfiles.d
/etc/systemd
/etc/systemd/system
/etc/systemd/system/getty.target.wants
...output omitted...
Generate a list of all block devices in the /dev directory on host:
[root@host ~]# find /dev -type b
/dev/vda1
/dev/vda
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