I am running solaris 10 with Veritas. I want to extend a filesystem. It's an oracle partition (/ora12). How can I find out if there is space available to expand the filesystem and then how does one extend it.
I'm from the HPUX world and so LVM was always how I did things.
Thanks
jackie (5 Replies)
Hi all,
currently , my root filesystem already reach 90 ++%
I already add more cylinder in the root partition as below
Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
0 root wm 67 - 5086 38.46GB (5020/0/0) 80646300
1 swap wu 1 - ... (11 Replies)
Hello
I need to expand a filesystem is full, but I understand that for this I need a volume manager like SVM or Veritas. I have installed solaris 10 but I give it a metastat and tells me there is no database, as if the installation does not have the sudmirrors attachments.
The filesystem... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I wanted to find out that in my database server which filesystems are shared storage and which filesystems are local. Like when I use df -k, it shows "filesystem" and "mounted on" but I want to know which one is shared and which one is local.
Please tell me the commands which I can run... (2 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have Aix 5.3 server and would like to extend the following filesystem.
Filesystem GB blocks Free %Used Iused %Iused Mounted on
/dev/lv_mecdr 120.00 12.04 90% 560973 14% /home/mecdrBut there's only 16G for the VG, may be i can expand it... (11 Replies)
Hi guys!
Could you tell me what's the difference of filesystem of Solaris to filesystem of Windows? I need to compare both.
I have read some over the net but it's so much technical. Could you explain it in a more simpler term? I am new to Solaris. Hope you help me guys.
Thanks! (4 Replies)
Dear all,
We are facing prolem when we are going to mount AIX filesystem, the system returned the following error
0506-307The AFopen call failed
: A file or directory in the path name does not exist.
But when we ls filesystems in the /etc/ directory it show
-rw-r--r-- 0 root ... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Need to ask the question regarding extending the zfs storage file system.
currently after using the command, df -kh
u01-data-pool/data 600G 552 48G 93% /data
/data are only 48 gb remaining and it has occupied 93% for total storage.
zpool u01-data-pool has more then 200 gb... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: shahzad53
14 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
mountall
mountall(1M) System Administration Commands mountall(1M)NAME
mountall, umountall - mount, unmount multiple file systems
SYNOPSIS
mountall [-F FSType] [-l | -r] [file_system_table]
umountall [-k] [-s] [-F FSType] [-l | -r] [-n]
umountall [-k] [-s] [-h host] [-n]
DESCRIPTION
mountall is used to mount file systems specified in a file system table. The file system table must be in vfstab(4) format. If no file_sys-
tem_table is specified, /etc/vfstab is used. If - is specified as file_system_table, mountall reads the file system table from the standard
input. mountall mounts only those file systems with the mount at boot field set to yes in the file_system_table.
For each file system in the file system table, the following logic is executed: if there exists a file/usr/lib/fs/FSType/fsckall, where
FSType is the type of the file system, save that file system in a list to be passed later, and all at once, as arguments to the
/usr/lib/fs/FSType/fsckall script. The /usr/lib/fs/FSType/fsckall script checks all of the file systems in its argument list to determine
whether they can be safely mounted. If no /usr/lib/fs/FSType/fsckall script exists for the FSType of the file system, the file system is
individually checked using fsck(1M). If the file system does not appear mountable, it is fixed using fsck before the mount is attempted.
File systems with a - entry in the fsckdev field are mounted without first being checked.
umountall causes all mounted file systems except root, /usr, /var, /var/adm, /var/run, /proc, and /dev/fd to be unmounted. If the FSType is
specified, mountall and umountall limit their actions to the FSType specified. There is no guarantee that umountall unmounts busy file sys-
tems, even if the -k option is specified.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-F Specify the FSType of the file system to be mounted or unmounted.
-h host Unmount all file systems listed in /etc/mnttab that are remote-mounted from host.
-k Use the fuser -k mount-point command. See the fuser(1M) for details. The -k option sends the SIGKILL signal to each
process using the file. As this option spawns kills for each process, the kill messages might not show up immediately.
There is no guarantee that umountall unmounts busy file systems, even if the -k option is specified.
-l Limit the action to local file systems.
-n List the actions that would be performed for the specified options, but do not actually execute these actions. Repeating
the command without the -n option executes the listed actions, assuming that the /etc/mnttab file has not changed in the
interval prior to repeating the command.
-r Limit the action to remote file system types.
-s Do not perform the umount operation in parallel.
FILES
/etc/mnttab Mounted file system table
/etc/vfstab Table of file system defaults
/usr/lib/fs/FSType/fsckall Script called by mountall to perform the file system check of all file systems of type FSType
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO fsck(1M), fuser(1M), mount(1M), mnttab(4), vfstab(4), attributes(5)DIAGNOSTICS
No messages are printed if the file systems are mountable and clean.
Error and warning messages come from fsck(1M) and mount(1M).
SunOS 5.10 28 Oct 2002 mountall(1M)