It can be done, but not exatly in the way you describe it.
Can you post a
So we can see to what directories your space is allocated on the root disk. There are obvious directories such as /var and /usr that can be moved to new partitions, but we need to be sure you aren't using /opt or similar directories heavily.
Hi there,
When I run top on my machine it says I have 497M swap space in use, and 380M swap space free,
but I have only allocated 512M swap space to the machine!!!!
Does anyone know how swap used is calculated in the top command?
Thanks... (1 Reply)
Now, i know a ufs file system can be increased using mkfs but hwo do I take space from a file system and add it to another file system? at my job here, that seems to be possible because I see request on it almost every day.
what is the exact command to do this and does the system need to be... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Will df+du=Total space allocted for a file system??
Is the above correct. Please correct me If iam wrong.
In one my programs the above is not happening.
Please help me out.
Many thanks.
Regards,
Manas (2 Replies)
Hi,
On one of our solaris servers, the root partition has filled up,(it was poorly sized in the first place), Does anyone have any advice about the best way to add space to a partition. I'm sure I've read how to do this somewhere before but just can't remember...:(
A colleague has suggested... (1 Reply)
i am working with solaris 9 and my disk usages are
# df -k
Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0 2148263 1902721 202577 91% /
/proc 0 0 0 0% /proc
mnttab 0 0 0 ... (3 Replies)
I searched the archives first, but found that there are alot of mixed answers on whether swap space can or can not be increased. Some postings said swap space can be increased using the swap or growfs commands while other postings said you can not increase the permanent size of the swap space.
... (1 Reply)
Hi
I have a mount point that is in production environment, and is currently filled up.
more space has been presented from same original source (EVA).
Problem;
1. Can't see presented space
2. After I discover the presented space, how do I go about adding this new space to existing mount point.... (9 Replies)
Hi ,
I Would like to know the space allocated by adding up all the allocated space to group of filesystems ..
example ,
df -h|grep /db | awk '{ print $4 }' ---> giving me all the used space on the filesystem but need to know the total used space by adding up all the values (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: nsankineni
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
sxid.conf
SXID.CONF(5) File Formats Manual SXID.CONF(5)NAME
sxid.conf - configuration settings for sxid
DESCRIPTION
This is the configuration file used by sxid to define it's parameters for execution. By default it is /etc/sxid.conf but can be anything
using the --config command line option for sxid. Options in this file are in the form of OPTION = "VALUE" . Note that the VALUE must be
contained in double quotes.
OPTIONS
ALWAYS_NOTIFY
If sxid does not find any changes it will not send an email unless you specify "yes" here.
ALWAYS_ROTATE
Usually sxid will only rotate the log files when there is a change from the last run. This is usually best, since all logs will
record a change rather than just a run of the program. If you want to rotate the logs every time sxid is run, regardless of changes,
specify "yes" here.
EMAIL Where to send the email containing the output of changes every time sxid is run. Example:
EMAIL = "Great Admin <root@host.com>"
ENFORCE
Normally sxid only flags items which are suid or sgid and are in a FORBIDDEN directory. With this option set to "yes" sxid will
remove the s[ug]id bit(s) on any files or directories it finds in forbidden directories and report any changes in the email. Note
that directories listed in FORBIDDEN are searched regardless of whether or not they are listed in SEARCH. However, EXCLUDED options
still apply to directories that fall under them.
EXCLUDE
A space seperated list of directories to exclude from the search. Note that if a SEARCH path falls under an EXCLUDE path that it
will still be searched. This is useful for excluding whole directories and only specifying one. Example:
SEARCH = "/usr /usr/src/linux"
EXCLUDE = "/usr/src"
EXTRA_LIST
File that contains a list of (each on it's own line) of other files that sxid should monitor. This is useful for files that aren't
+s, but relate to system integrity (tcpd, inetd, apache...). Example:
EXTRA_LIST = "/etc/sxid.list"
FORBIDDEN
A space seperated list of directories that are not supposed to contain any suid or sgid items. Items which are suid or sgid in these
directories are flagged in the email seperately from the other listings whether there are other changes or not. Example:
FORBIDDEN = "/tmp /home"
IGNORE_DIRS
Ignore entries for directories in these paths. This means that only files will be recorded. You can effectively ignore all directory
entries by setting this to "/".
KEEP_LOGS
This is a numerical value for how many log files to keep when rotating.
LISTALL
Forces a list of all entries to be included in th output. Implies ALWAYS_NOTIFY.
LOG_FILE
The full path of where to store the log files. These will be rotated, each rotated log being suffixed with a digit. The directories
must already exist. This is usually /var/log/sxid.log. Rotated logs would look like /var/log/sxid.log.n where 'n' is the number in
the rotation. The current log has no suffix.
AIL_PROG
Mail program. This changes the default compiled in mailer for reports. You only need this if you have changed it's location and
don't want to recompile sxid.
SEARCH A space seperated list of directories to search. Sxid will use these as a starting point for it's searches. Example:
SEARCH = "/usr /bin /lib"
AUTHOR
Ben Collins <bcollins@debian.org>
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to current maintainer Timur Birsh <taem@linukz.org>.
SEE ALSO sxid(1)sXid 4.0.5 January 2002 SXID.CONF(5)