I did some clean up this morning and thought it might be interesting to see just how much reported space is taken by a snapshot.
Here's df after each deletion:
I saw as I deleted, the older snapshots were larger so more space was freed as expected. Midpoint in the list I finished all the root snapshots and started in on /home snapshots.
The arrow notes a subvolume that had two other subvolumes within it, which explains the large jump in size at that point.
The last once was done long ago of my /home and I had removed a bunch of stuff from my /home after that snapshot so it was very large.
The real oddities are two new-ish snapshots that actually show a reduction in free space. I can only assume this has to do with how btrfs reports free space to the OS.
Anyway - not a scientific study, I just though it was interesting. Here's a calculated list of the reported changes in free space:
The odd-balls really stick out. Now, what do I do with 50GB of newly freed space?
Here's df after each deletion:
Code:
/dev/sdd3 482289664 334805436 144553236 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 334805712 144552984 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 334227328 145108624 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 333908896 145411376 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 333756276 145556740 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 333206816 146086112 70% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 323968428 154682252 68% /subvol <--- /dev/sdd3 482289664 323969072 154681728 68% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 316123004 162434204 67% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 313093124 165316956 66% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 310871164 167420916 65% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 307099764 171115972 65% /subvol /dev/sdd3 482289664 283063972 195036764 60% /subvol
The arrow notes a subvolume that had two other subvolumes within it, which explains the large jump in size at that point.
The last once was done long ago of my /home and I had removed a bunch of stuff from my /home after that snapshot so it was very large.
The real oddities are two new-ish snapshots that actually show a reduction in free space. I can only assume this has to do with how btrfs reports free space to the OS.
Anyway - not a scientific study, I just though it was interesting. Here's a calculated list of the reported changes in free space:
Code:
-252 555640 302752 145364 529372 8596140 -524 7752476 2882752 2103960 3695056 23920792