- Disk Overhead
Disk overhead is the reason why a computer hard drive or storage device's capacity may show its capacity as different from its actual capacity.
Example
For example, a computer company sells a
hard drive that is marked as 200gigabytes . When connected to a computer, it is shown that the actual storage capacity is 181.9 GiB (for example).Explanation
One common reason is that the computer company or hardware manufacturer reflects the size of the hard drive either in the standard system (where 1 KB = 1000 bytes) or the Binary-prefix system (where 1 KB = 1024 bytes). To avoid confusion, the Binary prefix symbols were renamed KiB, MiB and GiB with the advent of the IEC system. In this context, one KiB equals 1024
bytes . However, which convention the manufacturers oroperating system use usually depends on them.*1 KB = 1,000 bytes = 0.98 KiB
*1 MB = 1,000,000 bytes = 0.95 MiB
*1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes = 0.93 GiB
*1 TB = 1,000,000,000,000 bytes = 0.91 TiBFinally, some space inside a hard drive can also be used by the
file system for its internal use (ex: FAT table) (usually less than 1% on drives larger than 100 MB), or for data integrity and fault-tolerance (likeRAID ) (i.e. in a RAID1 you will lose 1/2 of your space to mirroring, and in a RAID5 with "x" drives you will lose 1/"x" of your space to parity). The latter is only seen in devices that contain multiple drives but are marketed as a single drive (i.e. NAS devices and external HDDs).ee also
*kilobyte, megabyte,
gigabyte definitions
*Binary prefix (KiB, MiB, GiB, etc.)
*File System
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