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Operating Systems AIX How to trace file sytem size change? Post 302415266 by zaxxon on Thursday 22nd of April 2010 06:41:02 AM
Old 04-22-2010
This has been asked very often. As a hint, parse a df on the specified filesystem(s) and write it to a temp file. Then compare this with a an actual df let's say 1h later. Call this script by an appropriate crontab entry.

If you have a particular question, don't hesitate to ask. The search function of the forum will reveal you examples etc. for sure.

Also this is a shell scripting question, not AIX specific. By seeing that you have about 88 posts already, you should know that there is a special area for shell scripting. Please remember this next time, ty Smilie
 

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ulimit(2)							System Calls Manual							 ulimit(2)

NAME
ulimit() - get and set user limits SYNOPSIS
Remarks The ANSI C "" construct denotes a variable length argument list whose optional [or required] members are given in the associated comment DESCRIPTION
provides for control over process limits. Available values for cmd are: Get the file size limit of the process. The limit is in units of 512-byte blocks and is inherited by child processes. Files of any size can be read. The optional second argument is not used. Set the file size limit of the process to the value of the optional second argument which is taken as a long. Any process can decrease this limit, but only a process with the privilege can increase the limit. Note that the limit must be specified in units of 512-byte blocks. Get the maximum possible break value (see brk(2)). Depending on system resources such as swap space, this maximum might not be attainable at a given time. The optional second argument is not used. Security Restrictions Some or all of the actions associated with this system call require the privilege. Processes owned by the superuser have this privilege. Processes owned by other users may have this privilege, depending on system configuration. See privileges(5) for more information about privileged access on systems that support fine-grained privileges. RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, a non-negative value is returned. Errors return a -1, with set to indicate the error. ERRORS
fails if one or more of the following conditions is true. cmd is not in the correct range. fails and the limit is unchanged if a process without the privilege attempts to increase its file size limit. SEE ALSO
brk(2), write(2), privileges(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
ulimit(2)
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