[gnome-system-monitor/wip/mallard-help: 10/62] disk usage draft
- From: Ekaterina Gerasimova <egerasimov src gnome org>
- To: commits-list gnome org
- Cc:
- Subject: [gnome-system-monitor/wip/mallard-help: 10/62] disk usage draft
- Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2014 22:19:38 +0000 (UTC)
commit 936e8933c4d810a8198c98d05237f47afd7b31b5
Author: Kelly Sinnott <ksinnott5ht gmail com>
Date: Mon Aug 1 21:24:23 2011 -0700
disk usage draft
help/C/fs-diskusage.page | 25 +++++++++++++------------
1 files changed, 13 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/help/C/fs-diskusage.page b/help/C/fs-diskusage.page
index 15aa254..f54d098 100644
--- a/help/C/fs-diskusage.page
+++ b/help/C/fs-diskusage.page
@@ -1,32 +1,33 @@
<page xmlns="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/"
type="topic" style="task"
- id="fs-diskusage">
+ id="fs-device">
<info>
- <revision version="0.1" date="2011-06-18" status="stub"/>
- <!--<link type="guide" xref="..." />-->
+ <revision version="0.1" date="2011-07-25" status="review"/>
+ <link type="guide" xref="index"/>
<credit type="author copyright">
<name>Phil Bull</name>
<email>philbull gmail com</email>
<years>2011</years>
</credit>
+ <credit type="author copyright">
+ <name>Kelly Sinnott</name>
+ <email>ksinnott5ht gmail com</email>
+ <years>2011</years>
+ </credit>
- <desc>The <gui>File Systems</gui> tab shows how much space is being used on each hard disk.</desc>
+ <desc>Each device corresponds to a <em>partition</em> on a hard disk.</desc>
</info>
- <title>Check how much disk space is being used</title>
+ <title>What are the different devices in the File System tab?</title>
<comment>
<cite date="2011-06-18" href="mailto:philbull gmail com">Phil Bull</cite>
- <p>Point the user to the File Systems tab. Point to resources on freeing-up disk space.</p>
</comment>
- <p>Short introductory text...</p>
+ <p>The <gui>File Systems</gui> tab of <app>System Monitor</app> displays a list of the <em>disk
devices</em> on your computer. The path given in the column <gui>Device</gui> is an interface assigned by
your computer during start-up to a given <em>partition</em> of the disk it exists on. The term "partition"
describes one or more physical areas of storage on a single physical drive. The computer makes these
partitions accessible to the user via an assigned <em>file system</em> in a process referred to as
<em>mounting</em>. The <gui>Device</gui> column shows the automatically assigned interface (which may or may
not be mounted) while the <gui>Directory</gui> column shows the mounted location. You can double-click the
device to open up the mounted directory in <app>Nautilus</app>.</p>
+ <p>The identifiers assigned by the computer (in the <gui>Device</gui> column) reflect the physical
location of each device. <cmd>/dev/sda</cmd> is the first disk. <cmd>/dev/sda1</cmd> is the first partition
on the first disk. <cmd>/dev/sdb2</cmd> is the second partition on the second disk, and so on. The final
letter describes the disk, and the number describes the partition on that disk.</p>
- <steps>
- <item><p>First step...</p></item>
- <item><p>Second step...</p></item>
- <item><p>Third step...</p></item>
- </steps>
+ <note><p>To learn more about disk setup, look for the <app>Disk Utility</app> application in the
<gui>Activities</gui> menu. This tool provides comprehensive information about your computer's drives and
their partitions.</p></note>
</page>
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