Sorry. I thought that all the remaining space is distributed to /home.
On 20.01.2015 00:34, Philip Guenther wrote: > On Mon, Jan 19, 2015 at 11:20 AM, Dmitry Orlov <dmitry.sen...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> Capacity is 465.8G >> Sum of labels is >> >> 1.0G+1.2G+4.0G+6.0G+2.0G+1.0G+10.0G+2.0G+2.0G+300.0G = 329.2G >> >> Where is 136.6G ? >> >> >> # disklabel -h sd0 >> # /dev/rsd0c: > ... >> 16 partitions: >> # size offset fstype [fsize bsize cpg] >> a: 1.0G 64 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # / >> b: 1.2G 2097216 swap # none >> c: 465.8G 0 unused >> d: 4.0G 4666560 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # /tmp >> e: 6.0G 13055168 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # /var >> f: 2.0G 25533888 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # /usr >> g: 1.0G 29728192 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # >> /usr/X11R6 >> h: 10.0G 31825344 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # >> /usr/local >> i: 2.0G 52796864 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # /usr/src >> j: 2.0G 56991168 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 # /usr/obj >> k: 300.0G 61185472 4.2BSD 4096 32768 1 # /home > > You'll need to compare that output with the output of "disklabel sd0", > without the -h option, to figure out whether there's unallocated space > after some partition(s), or if it's a math error in the -h display. > > > Philip Guenther