![]() ![]() ll -ih file*Ĥ242849 -rw-r-r- 1 root root 1.0G Mar 29 01:16 file1.txtĤ242894 -rw-r-r- 1 root root 0 Apr 1 03:12 file2.txtĬhecking the disk usage, we see that there is a rough agreement on the disk usage. ![]() Note that the inode (the first number) differs for the files. This behavior can be seen in the example below. The files are counted at their actual location on the server and the bind mount locations in Virtfs. The bind mounts used by VirtFS cause some files to be counted more than once in certain utilities, causing the appearance that VirtFS is using up disk space. This behavior is an artifact of how certain utilities calculate disk space. VirtFS does not use any space on the server. As such, removals of files in /home/virtfs/ can render your server nonfunctional. ![]() If you remove any mounted file or directory within the /home/virtfs/ directory, you will also delete those files and directories in the location where they are actually stored. Warning: Do not use the rm command to remove any mounted file or directory within the /home/virtfs/ directory! Certain utilities will report these bind mounts using disk space, even though they do not. These bind mounts allow them to have access to essential binaries and other files but not be able to see other users on the system. Virtfs uses bind mounts to provide a jailed environment for cPanel users. You may see significant disk usage reported for /home/virtfs by some utilities, like the following example. ![]()
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