10-16-2007
Why don't you do something like just rename /u01 to /u02, and rename /u00 to /u01?
This would be done by
umount /u00
umount /u01
rmdir /u00
mkdir /u02
edit /etc/vfstab to change the reference from /u01 to /u02, and /u00 to /u01.
then
mount /u01
mount /u02
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I need to setup several accounts on a solaris system.
(passwd,shadow,group)
My question is :
How can I create a group which can access a machine, but only in certain directories? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: SmartJuniorUnix
4 Replies
2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Does anyone know something about this? I have no idea what it means and how to do it. but if anyone can give me and explanation and also point me to a website, i'd really appreciate it (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: TRUEST
5 Replies
3. Solaris
Could someone please tell me which filesystems are supported by Solaris?
I am specifically interested in ext2, ext3, and XFS.
Is XFS included in a standard Solaris distro?
Are ext2 and ext3 only supported in Read-Only using lxrun?
Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ralph Armstrong
1 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi ,
We are using Veritas Net Backup , I want to create a new policy for backing up the (Solaris Operating System & the file systems) only the OS. not Full backup because we have an other policy for Oracle Apps and it takes full backup for all Partitions.
I need the OS backup to be in... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: adel8483
2 Replies
5. What is on Your Mind?
Hi,
I recently found this article in computerworld and I think it is very true - at least in my company ... what do you guys think - is the author right? Is it ignorant management that makes us IT people seem to be anti-social and weird?
Please share your thoughts
Kind regards
zxmaus (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: zxmaus
5 Replies
6. Programming
Hello.
I need to simulate a few serial links (doing a simulation of an application for a robot) and found socat which, at least with minicom, is working flawlessly.
I would really like to make pts static: ie same numbers between reboots, and automatic (not me opening terminals and leaving... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: erupter
2 Replies
7. Solaris
I have two test machines having solaris 10. I have shared a location which have a package on machine1 and mounted that location onto machine2 as below.
machine1: share -F nfs -o rw /home1/pkg/test
machine2: mount -F nfs -o rw machine2:/home1/pkg/test /tmp/test
Now, when i am trying to... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: snreddy_gopu
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
halmount
halmount(1) User Commands halmount(1)
NAME
halmount - mount and umount filesystems via hal
SYNOPSIS
halmount [OPTIONS]... <device|label> [mountpoint]
halmount -u [OPTIONS]... <device|label|mountpoint>
halmount -e [OPTIONS]... <device|label|mountpoint>
DESCRIPTION
halmount can mount and umount filesystems via hal. Hotpluggable devices and media such as USB sticks and CD-ROMs are typically not entered
into /etc/fstab and are therefore not mountable by normal users via the mount(8) command. Instead hal provides methods to mount and umount
such devices.
Additionally it's also possible to eject devices. For devices like USB sticks eject means the device cannot be mounted again until the
stick is re-plugged, ie a "save remove" feature.
OPTIONS
-t TYPE
specify the file system type to use
-o OPTIONS
specify mount options
-v verbose listing of devices
-u umount specified device
-e umount and eject specified device
-a perform requested mount/umount/eject operation all available devices
--listudi
list UDIs of devices, useful for debugging
EXAMPLES
halmount
list all mountable devices known to hal
halmount /dev/hdc
mount device hdc on default mount point (/media/volumelabel)
halmount /dev/hdc cdrom
mount device hdc on /media/cdrom
halmount -u "Holiday Pictures"
umount device that has the label "Holiday Pictures"
SEE ALSO
mount(8), umount(8), eject(1), fstab(5)
SUSE Linux November 2006 halmount(1)