freebsd-dev/bin/df
Christian S.J. Peron 239c9e601a Currently if a mount point is not accessible by the calling user,
invalid information will be printed if the -t flag is specified.

$ df -t ufs
Filesystem  1K-blocks     Used    Avail Capacity  Mounted on
/dev/ad0s1a    495726   139944   316124    31%    /
/dev/ad0s1e    253678     6438   226946     3%    /tmp
/dev/ad0s1f  56206340 13594248 38115586    26%    /usr
/dev/ad0s1d    694126    19812   618784     3%    /var
/dev/ad0s1d    694126    19812   618784     3%    /var
$

Note that the mount point which is not accessible shows
up as the previous file system that was printed. The reason
for this is that df -t will call statfs(2) on the pathname
supplied by getfsstat(2).

This is done to refresh the file system statistics in the
event that a previous file system had a long delay in
providing its stats.

This change affects the df utility in the following ways:
o Teach df has to deal with statfs(2) failing. If statfs(2)
  fails, fall back on the possibly stale stats provided by
  the initial call to getfsstat(2).
o Print a warning that the fs stats could possibly be stale
o Modify the man page and document this new behavior
  as a bug.

Approved by:	bmilekic (mentor)
PR:		68165
2004-07-20 18:24:47 +00:00
..
df.1 Currently if a mount point is not accessible by the calling user, 2004-07-20 18:24:47 +00:00
df.c Currently if a mount point is not accessible by the calling user, 2004-07-20 18:24:47 +00:00
Makefile