On 4/6/2016 9:20 PM, Frank Cox wrote:> On Thu, 7 Apr 2016 12:08:45 +0800 > Chandran Manikandan wrote: > >> >Should i need to run above command in home directory or root. > The command that he gave you will work from any directory. The / means start from the root directory so where you are when you run it is irrelevant.howevver if he doesn't run it as the root user, it won't be able to calculate space in directories the current user can't access. if you are running X-Windows, there's a nifty utility KDirStat that scans the disk tallying space, then gives you an interactive graphical view of usage. I believe you can install it from epel as package k4dirstat -- john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
On 07/04/16 14:48, John R Pierce wrote:> > if you are running X-Windows, there's a nifty utility KDirStat that > scans the disk tallying space, then gives you an interactive graphical > view of usage. I believe you can install it from epel as package > k4dirstaAnd the equivalent of that at the cli is ncdu - also from EPEL.
Hi John, /home is not mount. It's under the / root directory. sorry i had mention wrongly. / is mount in /dev/sda On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 4:56 PM, Anthony K <akcentos at anroet.com> wrote:> On 07/04/16 14:48, John R Pierce wrote: > >> >> if you are running X-Windows, there's a nifty utility KDirStat that scans >> the disk tallying space, then gives you an interactive graphical view of >> usage. I believe you can install it from epel as package k4dirsta >> > > And the equivalent of that at the cli is ncdu - also from EPEL. > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >-- *Thanks,* *Manikandan.C* *System Administrator*