Did you delete a lot of files, or a very few large ones?  I'm wondering if
your backup service is keeping a file-handle open on a backup vault.

-Rob


On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 4:18 PM, Josh More <jmore at starmind.org> wrote:

> On Mon, May 21, 2012 at 4:14 PM, Mr. B-o-B <mr.chew.baka at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Josh More cried from the depths of the abyss...
> >
> >> Ext4 effectively does a block-level wipe when you do a delete. (Makes
> >> forensics difficult.)  Odds are that your "rm" command has removed the
> >> file pointers, but the kernel has not yet completed scrubbing the
> >> disk.  I would expect the space to become free once that process is
> >> done.
> >>
> >
> > Understood.  Would the kernel scrubbing cause disk activity?  I do not
> see
> > any disk activity at the moment.
> >
>
> I would expect that it does, but I don't know how the kernel on your
> system would prioritize that activity.  Personally, I'd just run
> "sync" a few times and then check it in the morning.  If it's not
> clear, then I'm wrong.  :)
>
> Personally, if I were writing a driver and prioritizing read times
> (which is common), I would prioritize the scrubbing as low as
> possible, as that would only cause a production issue if the drive was
> near 100% full while a read prioritization issue would happen every
> time someone deleted a file.  Not sure how the driver you're using was
> written though.
>
> -Josh
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