12-05-2009
Its the RIGHT way as you mentioned and documented. What Im saying is, that it CAN be done. BUT DEPENDS on the criticality of the system and if the OP is willing to try if its a non-prod system
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LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
quotarestore
QUOTARESTORE(8) BSD System Manager's Manual QUOTARESTORE(8)
NAME
quotarestore -- restore dumped quota information to a file system volume
SYNOPSIS
quotarestore [-d] file-system [dump-file]
DESCRIPTION
The quotarestore program restores dumped quota information to a file system. The file dump-file should be in the format produced with
quotadump(8). The quotas, expiration times, and configured grace times listed in the dump file are loaded into the named file system. The
file-system argument should be a file or directory on the (mounted) file system, not a device special file.
If the -d option is given, quota entries on the file system that are not mentioned in the dump file will be deleted. Otherwise, they are
left alone.
If the dump-file is not specified, standard input is used.
SEE ALSO
quota(1), libquota(3), fstab(5), edquota(8), quotadump(8)
HISTORY
The quotarestore command appeared in NetBSD 6.0.
BSD
February 11, 2012 BSD