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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Unix Post 22838 by Kelam_Magnus on Tuesday 11th of June 2002 02:12:18 PM
Old 06-11-2002
minfree 0!

Thanks for that info. My minfree is set to 0. So I guess that means any user can use 100%.

Regarding the inode issue, I believe that this is correct for HPUX. With OnlineJFS for HPUX vxfs filesystems, inodes are created dynamically so you never run out. For the hfs file systems in HPUX, inodes are static and are created at filesystem creation and you can run out here even though you may still have disk space remaining.
 

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NEWFS_V7FS(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     NEWFS_V7FS(8)

NAME
newfs_v7fs -- construct a new 7th Edition(V7) File System SYNOPSIS
newfs_v7fs [-FZ] [-B byte-order] [-n inodes] [-s sectors] [-V verbose] special DESCRIPTION
newfs_v7fs builds a 7th Edition(V7) file system on the specified special. If it is a device, the size information will be taken from the disk label and before running newfs_v7fs the disk must be labeled using disklabel(8); the proper fstype is ``Version 7''. Otherwise, the size must be specified on the command line. V7 filesystem's block size and sector size are 512 byte. Disk address limits are 24 bit. The following arguments are supported: -B byte-order Specify the metadata byte order of the file system to be created. Valid byte orders are 'be', 'le', and 'pdp'. If no byte order is specified, the file system is created in host byte order. -F Create file system to a regular file (needs the -s option). -n inodes This specifies the number of inodes for the filesystem. If the number of inodes exceeds 65536, it is reduced to 65536. -s sectors Create file system with specified number of disk sectors. -V verbose This controls the amount of information written to stdout: 0 No output. 1 Overall size, ilist size, endian and filename length. 2 A progress bar. 3 4 More verbose message. The default is 3. -Z Fill file with zeroes instead of creating a sparse file. SEE ALSO
disklabel(5), disktab(5), disklabel(8), diskpart(8) BSD
April 29, 2011 BSD
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