04-29-2010
With several restrictions, you can resize the root file system but you need an different bootable media and to reboot a couple of times to achieve that.
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In my Solaris 10 based server, I have noticed the following mounts when a use DF -K
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0 5062414 3213876 1797914 65% /
/ 5062414 3213876 1797914 65% /net/se420
I understand the first mount because it appears in my vfstab file and is the mount of root that I would expect.... (1 Reply)
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hi
in my server ( / ) root filesystem size is full how to reduce the size and what are the files i want to remove.
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Hi,
df -h display:
# df -h
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0s0 9.8G 8.1G 1.7G 84% /
/proc 0K 0K 0K 0% /proc
mnttab 0K 0K 0K 0% /etc/mnttab
fd 0K 0K 0K 0% /dev/fd
swap 1.0G 152K 1.0G 1% /var/run
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Hi,
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Hi all.
New to the forum and new to Unix admin... / filesystem filled up and I can't find where the large files are. Any help will be apppreciated:
# df -k
Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
/dev/dsk/c1t0d0s0 8063580 7941745 41200 100% /
/proc ... (4 Replies)
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All,
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I see this when tried to create a dir using root
fstab entries are pretty normal
tried to remount with rw but it is still the same
block device /dev/sda2 is write-protected
---------- Post updated at 04:57 PM ---------- Previous update was at 03:51 PM ----------
fstab entry ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: robo
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Hello,
Can someone suggest me what I missing, I re-sized a root virtual disk to 30GB on the CentOS VM. After re-sizing the disk, I booted the OS and ran fdisk -list command I was able view the size of the disk as 30GB.
Paritions in the vm before I resize are:
/boot - Primary parition
/... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bobby320
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9. Red Hat
Is it possible to resize a filesystem by resizing the LUN on RHEL 6.4 64-bit with LVM and no impact to running applications? The research I have done so far seems to take the approach of adding a new LUN and then expaning the volume group to the new LUN. I'm looking for an approach that avoids a... (7 Replies)
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LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
reboot
reboot(8) System Manager's Manual reboot(8)
Name
reboot - automatic reboot procedures
Syntax
/etc/reboot [ -n ] [ -q ]
Description
The ULTRIX system is booted by loading a kernel image, usually into memory at location zero and transferring to zero. Because the system
is not reenterable, the kernel image must be read in from disk each time the system is bootstrapped.
When the reboot of a running system is desired, is normally used. If there are no users, can be used. The command causes the disks to be
synced, and then a multiuser reboot is initiated. The system is booted and an automatic disk check is performed. If the procedure suc-
ceeds, the system is then brought up for the users.
The system will reboot itself after a power failure or after a crash, provided auto-restart is enabled on your system. A consistency check
of the file systems will be performed and, unless the check fails, the system will resume multiuser operations.
Options
-n Prevents the disks from being synced.
-q Reboots quickly and ungracefully, without shutting down running processes first.
Files
System code
See Also
crash(8v), fsck(8), halt(8), init(8), newfs(8), rc(8), shutdown(8)
reboot(8)