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Full Discussion: lofs
Operating Systems Solaris lofs Post 302159561 by Perderabo on Friday 18th of January 2008 01:35:29 AM
Old 01-18-2008
Well, $MOE is just a variable name in the script. It could be $LARRY or $CURLY and it would work just as well. But good programmers pick good names for variables and in this case MOE means "most optimal execution" or something like that. The idea is that you have a bunch of libc libraries, each optimized for different cpu's. Then you figure out what capabilities your cpu has and you mount your best libc onto the the official libc name. The mount goes away with each reboot, so if you power-down, upgrade your cpu, and reboot, the OS will come up using whatever new features you got with the upgrade.
 

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LSSUBSYS(1)							 libcgroup Manual						       LSSUBSYS(1)

NAME
lssubsys - list hierarchies containing given subsystem SYNOPSIS
lssubsys [-m|--mount-points] [-M|--all-mount-points] [controller] [...] lssubsys [-m|--mount-points] [-M|--all-mount-points] [-i|--hierarchies] [-a|--all] lssubsys [-h|--help] DESCRIPTION
lssubsys list the hierarchies containing the given subsystem(s). If no subsystem is defined, it displays all mounted hierarchies. controller defines the subsystem whose hierarchy is shown. If this parameter is not used, the command will list all mounted subsystems. -m, --mount-points Display mount points. Only the first mount points of shown hierarchies are displayed. -M, --all-mount-points Display mount points. All mount points of shown hierarchies are displayed, each on separate line. -a, --all Display all subsystems (including unmounted ones). -i, --hierarchies Display the attached hierarchy number if the subsystem is in a hierarchy. If the option -m is also used, the hierarchy number is shown only for unmounted hierarchies. -h, --help Display help and exit. EXAMPLE
The command lssubsys -am lists all subsystems which are present in the system, mounted ones will be shown with their mount point: $ lssubsys -am ns cpuset cpu,devices cpuacct /cgroup/cpuacct memory /cgroup/memory freezer /cgroup/freezer net_cls /cgroup/net_cls The command lssubsys -ami lists all subsystems which are present in the system, mounted subsystems are listed with their mount points, unmounted ones which are in a hierarchy are listed with their hierarchy number: $ lssubsys -ami ns cpuset 5 cpu,devices 6 cpuacct /cgroup/cpuacct memory /cgroup/memory freezer /cgroup/freezer net_cls /cgroup/net_cls SEE ALSO
lscgroup (1), cgcreate (1), cgdelete (1), cgconfig.conf (5) Linux 2009-11-05 LSSUBSYS(1)
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