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Operating Systems HP-UX Increasing space in file system Post 302843389 by vbe on Tuesday 13th of August 2013 04:32:35 AM
Old 08-13-2013
If you are usre its different VG ( and not lvol) then its bad luck...
You only possicility is if the volume group which contains /oracle/TST/oraarch has enough room (by reducing if needed the latter FS...) to accept a filesystem from the other ( holding /oracle/TST/sapdata1), in which case you create the new lvol and filesystem and copy/restore the content then remove the older (after umounting and testing throughly...) so you can use the freed space, its not a difficult task only it will ask for some downtime for the applications... It would be the same sort of job when you change disk systems ( I had a few storage migrations a few years ago...)
 

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df(1B)						     SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands						    df(1B)

NAME
df - display status of disk space on file systems SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/df [-a] [-i] [-t type] [filesystem...] [filename...] DESCRIPTION
The df utility displays the amount of disk space occupied by currently mounted file systems, the amount of used and available space, and how much of the file system's total capacity has been used. If arguments to df are path names, df produces a report on the file system containing the named file. Thus `df .' shows the amount of space on the file system containing the current directory. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -a Report on all filesystems including the uninteresting ones which have zero total blocks (that is, auto-mounter). -i Report the number of used and free inodes. Print ` * ' if no information is available. -t type Report on filesystems of a given type (for example, nfs or ufs). EXAMPLES
Example 1: Using df A sample of output for df looks like: example% df Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on sparky:/ 7445 4714 1986 70% / sparky:/usr 42277 35291 2758 93% /usr Note that used+avail is less than the amount of space in the file system (kbytes); this is because the system reserves a fraction of the space in the file system to allow its file system allocation routines to work well. The amount reserved is typically about 10%; this can be adjusted using tunefs (see tunefs(1M)). When all the space on a file system except for this reserve is in use, only the super-user can allocate new files and data blocks to existing files. When a file system is overallocated in this way, df can report that the file system is more than 100% utilized. FILES
/etc/mnttab List of file systems currently mounted /etc/vfstab List of default parameters for each file system ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWscpu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
du(1), quot(1M), tunefs(1M), mnttab(4), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 14 Sep 1992 df(1B)
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