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test-webUNITS(7) Linux Programmer's Manual UNITS(7)

NAME units, kilo, kibi, mega, mebi, giga, gibi - decimal and binary prefixes

DESCRIPTION Decimal prefixes The SI system of units uses prefixes that indicate powers of ten. A kilometer is 1000 meter, and a megawatt is 1000000 watt. Below the standard prefixes.

          Prefix   Name    Value
          y        yocto   10^-24 = 0.000000000000000000000001
          z        zepto   10^-21 = 0.000000000000000000001
          a        atto    10^-18 = 0.000000000000000001
          f        femto   10^-15 = 0.000000000000001
          p        pico    10^-12 = 0.000000000001
          n        nano    10^-9  = 0.000000001
          µ        micro   10^-6  = 0.000001
          m        milli   10^-3  = 0.001
          c        centi   10^-2  = 0.01
          d        deci    10^-1  = 0.1
          da       deka    10^ 1  = 10
          h        hecto   10^ 2  = 100
          k        kilo    10^ 3  = 1000
          M        mega    10^ 6  = 1000000
          G        giga    10^ 9  = 1000000000
          T        tera    10^12  = 1000000000000
          P        peta    10^15  = 1000000000000000
          E        exa     10^18  = 1000000000000000000
          Z        zetta   10^21  = 1000000000000000000000
          Y        yotta   10^24  = 1000000000000000000000000

   The  symbol  for  micro  is  the Greek letter mu, often written u in an
   ASCII context where this Greek letter is not available.  See also

          ⟨http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/prefixes.html⟩

Binary prefixes The binary prefixes resemble the decimal ones, but have an additional 'i' (and "Ki" starts with a capital 'K'). The names are formed by tak‐ ing the first syllable of the names of the decimal prefix with roughly the same size, followed by "bi" for "binary".

          Prefix   Name   Value
          Ki       kibi   2^10 = 1024
          Mi       mebi   2^20 = 1048576
          Gi       gibi   2^30 = 1073741824
          Ti       tebi   2^40 = 1099511627776
          Pi       pebi   2^50 = 1125899906842624
          Ei       exbi   2^60 = 1152921504606846976

   See also

   ⟨http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html⟩

Discussion Before these binary prefixes were introduced, it was fairly common to use k=1000 and K=1024, just like b=bit, B=byte. Unfortunately, the M is capital already, and cannot be capitalized to indicate binary-ness.

   At  first  that  didn't matter too much, since memory modules and disks
   came in sizes that were powers of two, so everyone knew  that  in  such
   contexts  "kilobyte"  and  "megabyte"  meant  1024  and  1048576 bytes,
   respectively.  What originally was a sloppy use of the prefixes  "kilo"
   and  "mega"  started to become regarded as the "real true meaning" when
   computers were involved.  But then disk technology  changed,  and  disk
   sizes became arbitrary numbers.  After a period of uncertainty all disk
   manufacturers settled on the standard, namely k=1000, M=1000k, G=1000M.

   The situation was messy: in the 14k4  modems,  k=1000;  in  the  1.44MB
   diskettes,  M=1024000; etc.  In 1998 the IEC approved the standard that
   defines the binary prefixes given above, enabling people to be  precise
   and unambiguous.

   Thus, today, MB = 1000000B and MiB = 1048576B.

   In  the  free  software world programs are slowly being changed to con‐
   form.  When the Linux kernel boots and says

          hda: 120064896 sectors (61473 MB) w/2048KiB Cache

   the MB are megabytes and the KiB are kibibytes.

COLOPHON This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux 2012-08-05 UNITS(7)