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bug#10561: stat unclear about size on disk and type of blocks discussed


From: Pádraig Brady
Subject: bug#10561: stat unclear about size on disk and type of blocks discussed
Date: Sat, 21 Jan 2012 00:03:24 +0000
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:6.0) Gecko/20110816 Thunderbird/6.0

On 01/20/2012 05:47 PM, Filipus Klutiero wrote:
> Hi Pádraig and Jim,
> 
> On 2012-01-20 09:15, Pádraig Brady wrote:
>> On 01/20/2012 02:03 PM, Jim Meyering wrote:
>>> Pádraig Brady wrote:
>>> ...
>>>>> As for %o, if you'd ask me what "I/O block size" means without any
>>>>> context, I'm far from being sure I would answer it means size on
>>>>> disk. I suggest to call this Size on disk, or Size used on the
>>>>> filesystem.
>>>> I/O implies transfer.
>>>> So it corresponds to an "optimal transfer size hint"
>>>> This value can be different at each layer, for example:
>>>>
>>>> $ stat -c "%o" .                # file level
>>>> $ stat -f -c "%s" .             # file system level
>>>> # blockdev --getioopt /dev/sda  # device level
>>>>
>>>>> I'm not sure what language should be used instead. Perhaps instead
>>>>> of blocks the manual should talk about "data storage device blocks".
>>>> I suppose we could clarify "I/O block size" a bit.
>>>> How about s|I/O block size|optimal I/O block transfer size|
>>> or even without "block",
>>>
>>>    "optimal I/O transfer size"
>> OK I'll go with "optimal I/O transfer size hint",
>> since there is nothing guaranteed about it,
>> and in fact it's often wrong.
>>
>> cheers,
>> Pádraig.
>>
> 
> I'm sorry but this change does not really address my concern.

It does actually, because...

> The previous definition of %o did refer to "block" without specifying which 
> kind of block. This is no longer the case as the new definition no longer 
> refers to blocks. However, I still do not consider the new definition, 
> "Optimal I/O transfer size hint", understandable.
> To come back to my original problem, I tried figuring out how much disk space 
> a small file took. In Windows, I would look at "Size on disk". If "optimal 
> I/O transfer size hint" means size on disk, this is still very unclear. Even 
> after reading your answers, I don't understand what "Optimal I/O transfer 
> size" means.
> I am not looking for a transfer size.

... you know to ignore %o

> My question is, if I'm putting a small file on my filesystem, how much space 
> will it use.
> Here are 2 new descriptions I suggest:
> Size occupied when including slack space
> Size of the clusters occupied
> 
> Appart from %o, the ambiguity problem in the descriptions of %b and %B 
> remains.

No it does not. As I said they're abstract entities only valid in relation to 
each other.
Just multiple %b x %B to get your answer.

You may have missed the start of the last mail, where I said
the du command is more appropriate (it does the above for you).

cheers,
Pádraig.





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