2

Possible Duplicate:
What is taking up so much space on my disk, beside the filesystem?

I have a storage drive (2TB) and an OS drive (90GB SSD). I've run out of space on the OS drive:

/$ df -h
Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sdb1        72G   72G     0 100% /
udev            5.9G   12K  5.9G   1% /dev
tmpfs           2.4G  1.2M  2.4G   1% /run
none            5.0M     0  5.0M   0% /run/lock
none            5.9G  428K  5.9G   1% /run/shm
/dev/sda1       1.9T  639G  1.2T  37% /media/StorageDrive

So be it. But when I attempt to figure out where the space has gone, I cannot find it anything remotely approaching the capacity of the drive:

/$ sudo du -h -d 1
du: cannot access `./media/StorageDrive/home/ari/.gvfs': Permission denied
675G    ./media
2.3G    ./var
0   ./proc
7.0M    ./tmp
27M ./boot
4.0K    ./lib64
12K ./dev
44M ./home
16K ./lost+found
8.0M    ./sbin
223M    ./lib
4.0K    ./selinux
1.4M    ./run
140K    ./root
8.8M    ./bin
4.0K    ./mnt
38M ./etc
8.0K    ./srv
4.8G    ./usr
65M ./opt
0   ./sys
682G    .

Note the difference between the total (682G) and the mounted drives in /media (675G) is only about 9G. How are 72G being used? Where is this dark matter hiding?

2 Answers2

2

If it's not a subdirectory causing problems, it's possible that there is a large file in / taking up space. Please run the following to see if there's a likely culprit there:

sudo ls -al /
2

I've found the answer, and unfortunately it's too localized to help anyone. When I hooked my backup drive up to backup, it didn't mount it to the usual spot for some reason. So a directory BackupDrive was created in /media (and thus on /dev/sdb1), which had filled up. Epic fail.