semantic: 0.819 graphic: 0.816 device: 0.767 PID: 0.733 network: 0.688 other: 0.660 performance: 0.653 files: 0.642 socket: 0.593 boot: 0.544 vnc: 0.519 permissions: 0.456 KVM: 0.414 debug: 0.350 `qemu-img info` reports an incorrect actual-size when the underlying posix filesystem has transparent compression qemu-img info reports the same thing as `du`*1024: $ qemu-img info --output json ./my.qcow2 | jq '."actual-size"' 558619648 $ du ./my.qcow2 545527 ./my.qcow2 $ echo $((558619648 / 545527)) 1024 and this is correct in terms of bytes on disk, but due to transparent compression implemented by the filesystem, it is not the actual byte count: $ du -h --apparent-size ./my.qcow2 1346568192 my.qcow2 But that’s the point of that field, to show the amount of space used by the image on the host. The man page documents it as: “disk size: How much space the image file occupies on the host file system (may be shown as 0 if this information is unavailable, e.g. because there is no file system)”, and the QAPI definition of ImageInfo documents the actual-size field as “actual size on disk in bytes of the image”. So it is documented as and intended to be the number of bytes used, not the length of the file. Max This bug has been reported on the Ubuntu ISO testing tracker. A list of all reports related to this bug can be found here: http://iso.qa.ubuntu.com/qatracker/reports/bugs/1881648