Understanding "quota" output
Solution 1:
Block is normally of size 1 kilobytes nowadays, but it might be also 512 bytes - check this yourself.
- 6094452 is how many blocks of disk space you currently use,
- the first 2147483648 is the maximum you are expected to normally use (again in blocks, note it translates to 2 TB, not to 10 GB); you can grow beyond, but only temporarily;
- the second 2147483648 is how much you are allowed to use,
- the empty place that comes next is the "grace period"; it is used only when you exceed "quota", i.e. when you are between "quota" and "limit",
- 365672 is how many files you currently have (inodes, to be more exact),
- the remaining columns have the same meaning, but in regard to the "files" field; but they are 0, which means you have no quota on number of files
Solution 2:
quota -s <user>
will provide you human readable format output as follows
Disk quotas for user rashah (uid 524295):
Filesystem blocks quota limit grace files quota limit grace
/dev/mapper/work3 19502M 48829M 58594M 70086 0 0