Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How to make user's qutoa in human readable format? Post 302397736 by cqlouis on Tuesday 23rd of February 2010 03:07:04 AM
Old 02-23-2010
merci!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

formatting output in human readable numbers

Hi, The following command provides the usage in 1024-byte blocks du -ks * | sort -n | echo "$1" ... 1588820 user10 2463140 user11 2464096 user12 5808484 user13 6387400 user14 ..... I am trying to produce an output of first coulmn by multiplying by 1024 so that the output should... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: ghazi
11 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to convert epoch into human-readable

This is what I have to start out with more file 1208217600 1208131200 1193806800 I want to convert the epoch column into a human-readable format. My file has hundreds of these epoch times that I want to loop through and convert. (The epoch time is really the last column of the line) ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: snoman1
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Human readable sizes in Solaris bdf

hay every body i need script like bdf -h in hp-ux there is no option like solaris df -h it is only bdf -k so i need the output with GBytes (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: maxim42
8 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Convert epoch to human readable date & time format

Hello I have log file from solaris system which has date field converted by Java application using System.currentTimeMillis() function, example is 1280943608380 which equivalent to GMT: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 17:40:08 GMT. Now I need a function in shell script which will convert 1280943608380... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Yaminib
3 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Make netstat human readable?

Is there any way to make netstat output the information in a more human readable format? even if it's not exact? I don't even care if it has to round up/down to the nearest Meg to make it work. I wind up having to stare at netstat running for while and I wish I could get it to output things in a... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: MrEddy
10 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Display Directories with their sizes in human readable format

Hi, I want to list all the directories present in a particular location and want to display their sizes as well. I know "ls -lh" but it doesn't show the size of the complete directory. So i want something like dir1 266 MB dir2 2 KB dir3 22 MB ... ... file1 10 Kb ..... Thanks Sarbjit (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sarbjit
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Making big find command more human readable

This does not work. One line works but my pattern are about 100 characters long and it is messy to read. When I try to use several lines it does not two' find "$inputDirectory" \( -name 'very long pattern1' -o -name 'very long pattern2' -o -name... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Michael Stora
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Multiple records need to convert UNIXtime to human readable datatime and all output in one format

Hello Experts, Below is the record i have: sample data attached I want this record of each row to be in single line and there are multiple rowise unixtime mentioned e.g 11996327 , This needs to be converted to Human readdable data and time from multiple rows Can you help me , it will be... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: manishK
10 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Convert epoch time stamp into human readable format

Can someone help me to write a shell script to convert epoch timestamp into human readable format 1394553600,"test","79799776.0","19073982.728571","77547576.0","18835699.285714" 1394553600,"test1","80156064.0","19191275.014286","62475360.000000","14200554.720000"... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Moon1234
10 Replies

10. Programming

How to parse .nessus file to get result in human readable format?

Scripting Language: bash shell script, python I want to parse .nessus file in human readable format. If any one have any ideas please help me. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sk151993
2 Replies
EDQUOTA(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						EDQUOTA(8)

NAME
edquota -- edit user quotas SYNOPSIS
edquota [-Hu] [-f file-system] [-p proto-username] -d | username ... edquota [-H] -g [-f file-system] [-p proto-groupname] -d | groupname ... edquota [-Hu] [-f file-system] [-h block#/inode#] [-s block#/inode#] [-t block grace time/inode grace time] -d | username ... edquota [-H] -g [-f file-system] [-h block#/inode#] [-s block#/inode#] [-t block grace time/inode grace time] -d | groupname ... edquota [-Hu] -c [-f file-system] username ... edquota [-H] -g -c [-f file-system] groupname ... DESCRIPTION
edquota is a quota editor. By default, or if the -u flag is specified, one or more users may be specified on the command line. Unless -h, -s, or -t are used, a temporary file is created for each user with an ASCII representation of the current disk quotas and grace time for that user. By default, quota for all quota-enabled file systems are edited; the -f option can be used to restrict it to a single file system. An editor is invoked on the ASCII file. The editor invoked is vi(1) unless the environment variable EDITOR specifies otherwise. The quotas may then be modified, new quotas added, etc. Setting a quota to - or unlimited indicates that no quota should be imposed. Set- ting a quota to zero indicates that no allocation is permited. Setting a soft limit to zero with a unlimited hard limit indicates that allocations should be permitted on only a temporary basis. The current usage information in the file is for informational purposes; only the hard and soft limits, and grace time can be changed. Users are permitted to exceed their soft limits for a grace period that may be specified per user (or per-file system for quota version 1). Once the grace period has expired, the soft limit is enforced as a hard limit. The default grace period is one week. By default, disk quotas are in KB, grace time in seconds. Disk and inodes quota can be entered with a humanize_number(9) suffix (K for kilo, M for mega, G for giga, T for tera). Time can be entered with Y (year), W (week), D (day), H (hour) and M (minute) suffixes. Suffixes can be mixed (see EXAMPLES below). If the -H option if used, current quota, disk usage and time are displayed in a human-readable format. On leaving the editor, edquota reads the temporary file and modifies the on-disk quotas to reflect the changes made. If the -p flag is specified, edquota will duplicate the quotas of the prototypical user specified for each user specified. The -h, -s, and -t flags can be used to change quota limits (hard, soft and grace time, respectively) without user interaction, for usage in e.g. batch scripts. The arguments are the new block and inode number limit or grace time, separated by a slash. Units suffix may be used, as in the editor above. If the -g flag is specified, edquota is invoked to edit the quotas of one or more groups specified on the command line. With quota version 2, there is a per-file system user or group default quota to be copied to a user or group quota on the first allocation. The -d flag adds the default quota to the list of users or groups to edit. For quota version 1, there is no default block/inode quota, and no per-user/group grace time. To edit the file system-wide grace time, use -d. On quota2-enabled file systems, the -c flag cause edquota to clear quota entries for the specified users or groups. If disk or inode usages is not 0, limits are reverted to the default quota. If disk and inode usages are 0, the existing quota entries are freed. Only the super-user may edit quotas. EXAMPLES
Edit quotas for group games on all quota-enabled file systems: edquota -g Set 4MB hard block limit, 2MB soft block limit, 2048 inode hard limit, 1024 inode soft limit, 2 weeks and 3 days (or 17 days) block and inode grace time for the default quotas on file system /home: edquota -h 4M/2k -s 2M/1k -t 2W3D/2W3D -f /home -u -d SEE ALSO
quota(1), humanize_number(3), libquota(3), fstab(5), quotacheck(8), quotaon(8), quotarestore(8), repquota(8) BSD
January 29, 2012 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:05 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy