Sponsored Content
Operating Systems HP-UX bdf , /etc/fstab , /etc/mnttab Post 302148384 by Perderabo on Saturday 1st of December 2007 11:03:52 AM
Old 12-01-2007
It occurred to me that a non-general solution is very easy. All you need is a control file with line numbers. You paste the control file on to the output from bdf, sort, then cut away the line numbers. I am not on an HP-UX system, so to demo this, first I need an ersatz bdf command.
Code:
$ export PATH=$PATH:.
$ cat bdf
#! /usr/bin/sed 1d
Filesystem          kbytes    used   avail %used Mounted on
/dev/vg00/lvol3     524288  211800  310104   41% /
/dev/vg00/lvol1    1048576  792464  254216   76% /stand
/dev/vg00/lvol7    4194304 2111048 2066992   51% /var
/dev/vg00/lvol6    5275648 4324952  943312   82% /usr
/dev/vg00/lvolu3   30736384 3901997 25157825   13% /u03
/dev/vg00/lvolu2   27033600 21665312 5034033   81% /u02
/dev/vg00/lvolu1   20480000 16962500 3298935   84% /u01
/dev/vg00/lvol5     229376  103248  125280   45% /tmp
/dev/vg00/lvol4    4620288 3775088  838648   82% /opt
/dev/vg00/lvol8    1048576  141744  899856   14% /home
/dev/vg00/lvolu4   5144576 2148221 2809135   43% /u04
$
$
$
$ cat control
01
02
03
04
05
11
10
09
06
07
08
12
$
$
$
$ bdf
Filesystem          kbytes    used   avail %used Mounted on
/dev/vg00/lvol3     524288  211800  310104   41% /
/dev/vg00/lvol1    1048576  792464  254216   76% /stand
/dev/vg00/lvol7    4194304 2111048 2066992   51% /var
/dev/vg00/lvol6    5275648 4324952  943312   82% /usr
/dev/vg00/lvolu3   30736384 3901997 25157825   13% /u03
/dev/vg00/lvolu2   27033600 21665312 5034033   81% /u02
/dev/vg00/lvolu1   20480000 16962500 3298935   84% /u01
/dev/vg00/lvol5     229376  103248  125280   45% /tmp
/dev/vg00/lvol4    4620288 3775088  838648   82% /opt
/dev/vg00/lvol8    1048576  141744  899856   14% /home
/dev/vg00/lvolu4   5144576 2148221 2809135   43% /u04
$
$
$
$ bdf | paste control - | sort -n | cut -f2
Filesystem          kbytes    used   avail %used Mounted on
/dev/vg00/lvol3     524288  211800  310104   41% /
/dev/vg00/lvol1    1048576  792464  254216   76% /stand
/dev/vg00/lvol7    4194304 2111048 2066992   51% /var
/dev/vg00/lvol6    5275648 4324952  943312   82% /usr
/dev/vg00/lvol5     229376  103248  125280   45% /tmp
/dev/vg00/lvol4    4620288 3775088  838648   82% /opt
/dev/vg00/lvol8    1048576  141744  899856   14% /home
/dev/vg00/lvolu1   20480000 16962500 3298935   84% /u01
/dev/vg00/lvolu2   27033600 21665312 5034033   81% /u02
/dev/vg00/lvolu3   30736384 3901997 25157825   13% /u03
/dev/vg00/lvolu4   5144576 2148221 2809135   43% /u04
$

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

BDF test for > 90%

I am trying to write a script that will allow me to do a bdf then do a test for a percentage that is 90% or greater. If the test is true then i want to send a message to myself and one other person. Any suggestions ? ? ? Thanks. ....svp (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: svp4444
6 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

/etc/mnttab is zero length - I have done a silly thing

Being the clever-clogs that I am, I have managed to clobber the contents of /etc/mnttab. It started when I tried to unmount all the volumes in a prticular veritas disk group and neglected to include a suitable grep in my command line, thus attempting to unmount _all_ the filesystems on the... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Smiling Dragon
7 Replies

3. Linux

veritas hasf /etc/mnttab

Hi All, Where is now the /etc/mnttab if you are in veritas sfha for red hat es 4? Thanks in advance for any comments. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: itik
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

/etc/vfstab vs /etc/mnttab

what is the difference between the /etc/vfstab and /etc/mnttab? when i check both files, the content is almost the same. can you enlighten me? what i know is /etc/vfstab is used for hard mounts. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hrist
4 Replies

5. Solaris

My /etc/mnttab file is showing ro permission for /usr

Hi All, My current /usr utilization is 100%.As i don't have another harddisk i decided to delete some unnecessary files under /usr.But,while deleteing it is giving error "it is a readonly filesystem".I checked /etc/mnttab file it is showing the following entry /dev/lofi/1 /usr hsfs ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: navjotmannan
3 Replies

6. Solaris

what is the difference between /etc/mnttab and /etc/vfstab

what is the difference between /etc/mnttab and /etc/vfstab???? what are these files used for one time i removed mnttab file from my solaris box. infact i renamed it and my solaris box was not booting properly. (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: chidori
12 Replies

7. Solaris

MNTTAB and NFS questions

SunOS 5.10 Generic_142900-15 sun4u sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise I have been asked to move all file from /CV to /EABATCH looking at our mnttab I see these two entries. wdcprodhome:/eabatch/EABATCH /EABATCH nfs nodevices,bg,intr,xattr,zone=cbp011,dev=5500010 1288539528 ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Harleyrci
0 Replies

8. HP-UX

bdf hangs

hi, bdf command hangs but before it, it lists all the fstab content, so i cannot find the reason... could anybody give me any clue?? thanks a lot for your attention. regards Pablo i attach syslog Jan 14 16:30:00 sv23 vmunix: hp_dlpi_wput:Received an unrecognized primitive: 101d... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: pabloli150
7 Replies

9. HP-UX

Bdf in HP-UX

Hi guys, I have to make an output of several databases we've got running on our system with the command bdf. This has to be done every 3 months. I want to put it in an scriptfile and trigger it in crontab. In the output it must display the differences in diskspace between these three monts. Any... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: djmental
3 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

/etc/mnttab empty UNIXware 7.1.3

Hi Guys New to this forum so apologies if posted in wrong place. Got a unixware 7.1.3 system (I know !). df -k produces no output which I believe is because /etc/mnttab is empty. Can /etc/mnttab be re-built ? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: deel
2 Replies
LVM(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						  LVM(3pm)

NAME
Linux::LVM - Perl extension for accessing Logical Volume Manager(LVM) data structures on Linux. SYNOPSIS
use Linux::LVM; Linux::LVM->units('G'); ABSTRACT
The live data used in the examples is included in the DESCRIPTION area for your convenience and reference. DESCRIPTION
units() Get or set the units used to report sizes of LVs, PVs, etc. legal values: hbskmgtpeHBSKMGTPE see man lvm documentation of --units get_volume_group_list() This routine will return an array that contains the names of the volume groups. @vgs = get_volume_group_list(); print "@vgs "; Would yield the following: vg00 get_volume_group_information($) This routine will return all of the volume group information about the specified volume group. %vg = get_volume_group_information("vg00"); foreach(sort keys %vg) { print "$_ = $vg{$_} "; } Would yield the following: access = read/write act_pv = 2 alloc_pe = 3840 alloc_pe_size = 15 alloc_pe_size_unit = GB cur_lv = 3 cur_pv = 2 free_pe = 864 free_pe_size = 3.38 free_pe_size_unit = GB max_lv = 256 max_lv_size = 255.99 max_lv_size_unit = GB max_pv = 256 open_lv = 0 pe_size = 4 pe_size_unit = MB status = available/resizable total_pe = 4704 uuid = BBq8si-NyRR-9ZNW-3J5e-DoRO-RBHK-ckrszi vg_number = 0 vg_size = 18.38 vg_size_unit = GB vgname = vg00 get_logical_volume_information($) This routine will return all of the logical volume information associated with the specified volume group. %lv = get_logical_volume_information("vg00"); foreach $lvname (sort keys %lv) { foreach(sort keys %{$lv{$lvname}}) { print "$_ = $lv{$lvname}->{$_} "; } print " "; } Would yield the following results: alloc_le = 1024 allocation = next free cur_le = 1024 device = 58:0 lv_number = 1 lv_size = 4 lv_size_unit = GB name = /dev/vg00/lvol1 open_lv = 0 read_ahead = 1024 status = available write_access = read/write alloc_le = 1280 allocation = next free cur_le = 1280 device = 58:1 lv_number = 2 lv_size = 5 lv_size_unit = GB name = /dev/vg00/lvol2 open_lv = 0 read_ahead = 1024 status = available write_access = read/write alloc_le = 1536 allocation = next free cur_le = 1536 device = 58:2 lv_number = 3 lv_size = 6 lv_size_unit = GB name = /dev/vg00/lvol3 open_lv = 0 read_ahead = 1024 status = available write_access = read/write get_physical_volume_information($) This routine will return all of the information information about the physical volumes assigned to the specified volume group. %pv = get_physical_volume_information("vg00"); foreach $pvname (sort keys %pv) { foreach(sort keys %{$pv{$pvname}}) { print "$_ = $pv{$pvname}->{$_} "; } print " "; } Would yield the following results: device = /dev/hda3 free_pe = 0 pv_number = 1 status = available / allocatable total_pe = 2160 device = /dev/hda4 free_pe = 864 pv_number = 2 status = available / allocatable total_pe = 2544 get_lv_info($) This routine will return all of the information about the specified logical volume. The information will be returned in a hash. get_lv_info %lv = get_lv_info("/dev/vg00/lvol1"); foreach (sort keys %lv) { print "$_ = $lv{$_} "; } Would yield the following results: access = read/write alloc_le = 1024 allocation = next free block_device = 58:0 current_le = 1024 lv_name = /dev/vg00/lvol1 lv_number = 1 lv_open = 0 read_ahead = 1024 size = 4 size_unit = GB status = available vg_name = vg00 get_pv_info($) This routine will return all of the information about the specified physical volume. The information will be returned in a hash. %pv = get_pv_info("/dev/hda3"); foreach (sort keys %pv) { print "$_ = $pv{$_} "; } Would yield the following results: alloc_pe = 2160 allocatable = yes (but full) free_pe = 0 num_lvols = 2 pe_size = 4096 pe_size_unit = KByte pv_name = /dev/hda3 pv_number = 1 sectors = 17703630 size = 8.44 size_info = NOT usable 4.19 MB [LVM: 136 KB] size_unit = GB status = available total_pe = 2160 uuid = 2c5ADu-oEdt-ovCe-rqp0-MWpF-I5u1-8XigH4 vg_name = vg00 Command Output Used In The Above Examples: /sbin/vgdisplay -v --- Volume group --- VG Name vg00 VG Access read/write VG Status available/resizable VG # 0 MAX LV 256 Cur LV 3 Open LV 0 MAX LV Size 255.99 GB Max PV 256 Cur PV 2 Act PV 2 VG Size 18.38 GB PE Size 4 MB Total PE 4704 Alloc PE / Size 3840 / 15 GB Free PE / Size 864 / 3.38 GB VG UUID BBq8si-NyRR-9ZNW-3J5e-DoRO-RBHK-ckrszi --- Logical volume --- LV Name /dev/vg00/lvol1 VG Name vg00 LV Write Access read/write LV Status available LV # 1 # open 0 LV Size 4 GB Current LE 1024 Allocated LE 1024 Allocation next free Read ahead sectors 1024 Block device 58:0 --- Logical volume --- LV Name /dev/vg00/lvol2 VG Name vg00 LV Write Access read/write LV Status available LV # 2 # open 0 LV Size 5 GB Current LE 1280 Allocated LE 1280 Allocation next free Read ahead sectors 1024 Block device 58:1 --- Logical volume --- LV Name /dev/vg00/lvol3 VG Name vg00 LV Write Access read/write LV Status available LV # 3 # open 0 LV Size 6 GB Current LE 1536 Allocated LE 1536 Allocation next free Read ahead sectors 1024 Block device 58:2 --- Physical volumes --- PV Name (#) /dev/hda3(1) PV Status available / allocatable Total PE / Free PE 2160 / 0 PV Name (#) /dev/hda4(2) PV Status available / allocatable Total PE / Free PE 2544 / 864 SEE ALSO
vgdisplay(1M) lvdisplay(1M) pvdisplay(1M) AUTHOR
Chad Kerner, <chadkerner@yahoo.com> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003 by Chad Kerner This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-02-11 LVM(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:09 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy