06-21-2006
disk space
HTFS sounds like SCO... if this is SCO UNIX the command is actually dfspace to find out how much space is left.
If you are unable to boot because of the error, you may need to try to boot into single user mode and delete the contents of /tmp.
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1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
HI,
Currently I am working in One of the webhosting company and I found
on one of my server "/home" partition is getting full say 105% usage...
But when I actually check the partition size using "du -h", exact partition
utilization is only 60-70%.
So... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jagdish.machhi@
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I am new to Solaris so please bear with me. I have spent enough time searching to get somewhat of a grip here but I am not sure what to do next. I am trying to grow a file system on a Solaris 8 server.
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Hi All,
My Solaris 8 firewall server is getting full on the / filesystem. I don't know which one should I delete. I think there's no more to delete on the file like logs or temp file.
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5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
during installation i created four partitions mainly
/ 5GB
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/boot 100MB
swap 2GB
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6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I was tryin to copy a large file under /tmp location.
I guess the disk space got full and i got fork error.
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/tmp
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7. Red Hat
Hi All,
My disk usage show 100 % . When I check “df –kh” it shows my root partition is full. But when I run the “du –skh /” shows only 7 GB is used.
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda1 30G 28G 260MB 100% /
How I can identify who is using the 20 GB of memory.
Os: Centos... (10 Replies)
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Hello, you may know that linux root password can be resetted (example from rescue mode), so this means linux server offers no protection against access of data when you get somehow remote or physical access to server?
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9. Shell Programming and Scripting
i want to create 1 script to monitor 1 particular filesystem out of the diferent filesystems. if disk space of that particular filesystem increases by 80% it sends an alert mail to an email id
---------- Post updated at 04:18 PM ---------- Previous update was at 04:17 PM ----------
no. I am... (1 Reply)
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WIPE(1) LAM TOOLS WIPE(1)
NAME
wipe - Shutdown LAM.
SYNTAX
wipe [-bdhv] [-n <#>] [<bhost>]
OPTIONS
-b Assume local and remote shell are the same. This means that only one remote shell invocation is used to each node. If -b is
not used, two remote shell invocations are used to each node.
-d Turn on debugging mode. This implies -v.
-h Print the command help menu.
-v Be verbose.
-n <#> Wipe only the first <#> nodes.
DESCRIPTION
This command has been deprecated in favor of the lamhalt command. wipe should only be necessary if lamhalt fails and is unable to clean up
the LAM run-time environment properly. The wipe tool terminates the LAM software on each of the machines specified in the boot schema,
<bhost>. wipe is the topology tool that terminates LAM on the UNIX(tm) nodes of a multicomputer system. It invokes tkill(1) on each
machine. See tkill(1) for a description of how LAM is terminated on each node.
The <bhost> file is a LAM boot schema written in the host file syntax. CPU counts in the boot schema are ignored by wipe. See bhost(5).
Instead of the command line, a boot schema can be specified in the LAMBHOST environment variable. Otherwise a default file, bhost.def, is
used. LAM searches for <bhost> first in the local directory and then in the installation directory under etc/.
wipe does not quit if a particular remote node cannot be reached or if tkill(1) fails on any node. A message is printed if either of these
failures occur, in which case the user should investigate the cause of failure and, if necessary, terminate LAM by manually executing
tkill(1) on the problem node(s). In extreme cases, the user may have to terminate individual LAM processes with kill(1).
wipe will terminate after a limited number of nodes if the -n option is given. This is mainly intended for use by lamboot(1), which
invokes wipe when a boot does not successfully complete.
EXAMPLES
wipe -v mynodes
Shutdown LAM on the machines described in the boot schema, mynodes. Report about important steps as they are done.
FILES
$LAMHOME/etc/lam-bhost.def default boot schema file
SEE ALSO
recon(1), lamboot(1), tkill(1), bhost(5), lam-helpfile(5)
LAM 6.5.8 November, 2002 WIPE(1)