10-07-2002
Do you know what commands to use for finding the information you are looking for? If so, then think about how you would do this manually, and then put that logical thinking into a script which does the same.
First, figure out which shell or programming language you are going to use.
Second, find the commands that will gather the information you need (such as disk space, who is on what disk,....).
Third, start experimenting.
Post back what OS/version, what shell you are going to use, if this will be a manually run script or batch...
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1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
RedHat 7.0
Caldera 2.4
From Windows 2000 server, you can allow ceratin users to use only so much disk space when they login.
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Hi, I'm trying to setup user quotas on my Linux system.
It is Suse 7.3 running the standard kernel from that release.
When I try to run quotaon, I get the following:
# quotaon -v /dev/hdc1
quotaon: using /home/aquota.user on /dev/hdc1: Invalid argument
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3. Solaris
Has anyone ever used disk quotas with NIS? I tried to implement it the normal way but since the users only exist in NIS and not in the local passwd file when i try the edquota command it cannot find the user.
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5. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Heres a stupid question to all you Linux gods/goddesses.
Is there any way to have the system automatically set user quotas when a user account is created or does it have to be done by hand or a script. Every article, thread, anything Ive read so far only shows how to set quotas manually. Any... (3 Replies)
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7. Ubuntu
Hi peeps,
I have a teenage lad who needs to learn some discipline with internet access etc. etc. My main problem is that he is downloading so much that he is using more than his fair share. What I'd like to do is set a download quota for him so that he can learn what this all means. Can... (10 Replies)
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Hello all,
I am trying to set quotas on /export/home filesystem for some of our users on a Solaris Zone I know that you would be redirecting me to some of the documentation pages, but I have already done that.
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Hello.. I wrote the following shell script to run disk quotas for assigning limits to users. I need to know the partition which the user has created and mount it. So i copied the partitions (which will be displayed after running fdisk -l) and separted the last line from it and cut the required... (0 Replies)
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Hi,
I'm practicing new things with Linux/Unix and I need someone to point me at the right direction.
Lets say I create a user named user1. After creating it, how would I enable quotas for it. I have already added "userquota" under "/etc/fstab" and rebooted my system, but after I run the command... (1 Reply)
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
yum-shell
yum(8) yum(8)
NAME
yum - Yellowdog Updater Modified shell
SYNOPSIS
yum shell [filename]
DESCRIPTION
yum includes an interactive shell for conducting multiple commands or sets of commands during a single execution of yum. These commands can
be issued manually or passed to yum from a file. The commands are much the same as the normal yum command line options. See here yum(8) for
that information. There are a few additional commands documented below.
config
[argument] [value]
args: debuglevel, errorlevel, obsoletes, gpgcheck, assumeyes, exclude
If no value is given it prints the current value.
If value is given it sets that value.
repo
[argument] [option]
list: lists repositories and their status
enable: enable repositories. option = repository id
disable: disable repositories. option = repository id
transaction
[argument]
list: lists the contents of the transaction
reset: reset (zero-out) the transaction
solve: run the dependency solver on the transaction
run: run the transaction
Examples
The following are examples of using the yum shell.
list available packagename*
groupinfo 'Some Group'
install foo
remove bar
update baz
run
That will list available packages matching the glob 'packagename*'. It will return information on the group 'Some Group' It will
then queue the following commands into the transaction: install foo, remove bar, update baz. Then the 'run' command will resolve
dependencies for the transaction commands and run the transaction.
SEE ALSO
yum (8)
http://yum.baseurl.org/
AUTHORS
See the Authors file included with this program.
BUGS
There of course aren't any bugs, but if you find any, they should be sent to the mailing list: yum@lists.baseurl.org or filed in bugzilla.
Seth Vidal yum(8)