For a computer user, you store, move, and delete files on disk day after day. Of course you care about disk space usage. There is a Shell in Linux that allows users to have a clear picture of how disk space is being used anytime, anywhere. It is the "DF" command.
We tried to enter DF in the terminal to see what it would show.
Gosh, there's a lot of stuff. But those numbers are so long, do I have to spend a lot of time trying to figure out how much space the disk has? Perhaps DF's lifeline-H parameter can help you. We tried to enter DF in the terminal.
Is it much clearer now? But I wonder what kind of file system these partitions are? There may be a parameter to help you:-T. Please be sure to note that this is a capital T. is case-sensitive in Shell commands.
Now I see the type of partition, but it shows the space capacity with that long number. Do you see the partition type and the simple way to display the disk capacity? Some! is to put the-T and-H parameters together!
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