9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
AIX Version 6.1 and 7.1.
I understand that when the OS initially creates the FS and inodes, its pretty strict, but not always tuned to a 1:1 ratio. I see the same thing when adding a whole disk LV to a separate device.
It seems that when we expand a filesystem the inodes don't get tuned... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mrmurdock
5 Replies
2. Red Hat
/ has become full.... So i'm unable to login to the server. What should i do now ??
please help me... Thanks in advance (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vamshigvk475
4 Replies
3. Linux
Hi can someone tell me what does kill -3 processid does?
kill -3 PID
Would it create a heapdump?
If not , can you tell me how I can create a heapdump of a process in linux?
Or heapdump related to java processes only ? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mnassiri
5 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
/Path/snowbird9/nrfCompMgrRave1230100920.log.gz:09/20/2010 06:14:51 ERROR Error Message.
/Path/snowbird6/nrfCompMgrRave1220100920.log.gz:09/20/2010 06:14:51 ERROR Error Message.
/Path/snowbird14/nrfCompMgrRave920100920.log.gz:09/20/2010 06:14:51 ERROR Error Message.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Shirisha
0 Replies
5. Solaris
Hello Friends,
Need your help !!
I have WebSphere Application Server 6 running on Solaris 10, some of my applications are facing out of memory errors. I have tried increasing the heapsize, still I am getting same messages randomly. I have used kill -3 <PID> to generate the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sahilsardana
1 Replies
6. HP-UX
I'm not a unix admin, just fell into support, so I may be asking a real duh question.
Client runs a PeopleSoft HR/Payrool system. The batch server runs in HPUX PA_RISC 11.11
When a batch process runs, output is written to "staging" directory. When the job finishes, successfully or not, the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: abNORMal
1 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Everyone,
I think I've filled up one of the partitions on my drive. I suspect that one of the applications I've been running has been spitting out junk files to this partition - most of which can be deleted. The problem is that I have no idea how to go look at what's on that partition and... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Choppy
2 Replies
8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi Exprts,
I faced this problem several times, which / file system is full (near 100%) and "proc" under that is the main reason.
i don't know how to reduce the size as all directories under proc seems important & other dir/files under / are OS related & could not be removed.
could anyone... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: nikk
6 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi..
i am having a problem, for some reason my / directory is 100 % full.. and i didn't install or anything on it.. it has almost 2 gig on thr root directory.. maybe i am missing some concept because i do not understand why it get full. it is happening on all three of my system.. and i always... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: souldier
9 Replies
CP(1) General Commands Manual CP(1)
NAME
cp, cpdir - file copy
SYNOPSIS
cp [-pifsmrRvx] file1 file2
cp [-pifsrRvx] file ... directory
cpdir [-ifvx] file1 file2
OPTIONS
-p Preserve full mode, uid, gid and times
-i Ask before removing existing file
-f Forced remove existing file
-s Make similar, copy some attributes
-m Merge trees, disable the into-a-directory trick
-r Copy directory trees with link structure, etc. intact
-R Copy directory trees and treat special files as ordinary
-v Display what cp is doing
-x Do not cross device boundaries
EXAMPLES
cp oldfile newfile # Copy oldfile to newfile
cp -R dir1 dir2 # Copy a directory tree
DESCRIPTION
Cp copies one file to another, or copies one or more files to a directory. Special files are normally opened and read, unless -r is used.
-r also copies the link structure, something -R doesn't care about. The -s option differs from -p that it only copies the times if the
target file already exists. A normal copy only copies the mode of the file, with the file creation mask applied. Set-uid bits are cleared
if the owner cannot be set. (The -s flag does not patronize you by clearing bits. Alas -s and -r are nonstandard.)
Cpdir is a convenient synonym for cp -psmr to make a precise copy of a directory tree.
SEE ALSO
cat(1), mkdir(1), rmdir(1), ln(1), rm(1).
CP(1)