04-14-2006
This is not a task for someone new to unix. But if you want to proceed, you will need a lot more information. A good start is what version of HP-UX? Mountpoint implies filesystem, what type of filesystem? If it's JFS, do you have the Advanced JFS product installed? Which volume manager are you using? I will assume that you are using LVM....so do a vgdisplay on the volume group to get the free extents and the extent size. Multiply these together to get the available space in the volume group. There is a good chance that free extents will be zero...in that case you have allocated all of the space on the disks in the volume group and you will need to acquire more disks...or least another one.
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LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
msdosfs
MSDOSFS(5) BSD File Formats Manual MSDOSFS(5)
NAME
msdosfs -- MS-DOS file system
SYNOPSIS
options MSDOSFS
DESCRIPTION
The msdosfs driver will permit the FreeBSD kernel to read and write MS-DOS based file systems.
The most common usage follows:
mount -t msdosfs /dev/ada0sN /mnt
where N is the partition number and /mnt is a mount point. Some users tend to create a /dos directory for msdosfs mount points. This helps
to keep better track of the file system, and make it more easily accessible.
It is possible to define an entry in /etc/fstab that looks similar to:
/dev/ada0sN /dos msdosfs rw 0 0
This will mount an MS-DOS based partition at the /dos mount point during system boot. Using /mnt as a permanent mount point is not advised
as its intention has always been to be a temporary mount point for floppy and ZIP disks. See hier(7) for more information on FreeBSD direc-
tory layout.
SEE ALSO
mount(2), unmount(2), mount(8), mount_msdosfs(8), umount(8)
AUTHORS
This manual page was written by Tom Rhodes <trhodes@FreeBSD.org>.
BSD
October 1, 2013 BSD