vi uses /var/tmp for storing temporary versions of the file you edit. This is what you probably mean instead of a swap file.
I think you have your file mask set incorrectly. Unless you specified the directory command in your .exrc file - in your home directory. Assuming you have not tired to write the tmp files someplace odd by accident:
is what you want.
To see your current umask
The output for this should be 02 -- when it is set correctly.
This User Gave Thanks to jim mcnamara For This Post:
Hey everyone,
first of all, this is the motherboard I have: GigaByte GA-K8NXP-9 , nForce4 Ultra. It supports RAID 0, 1, 0+1 apparently both on the IDE and S-ATA HDD.
Now what I had in mind is popping 2 x 6Gb HDD in the IDE slots as slave 1 & 2 where my 2 DVD/CD burners are master. I then plan... (2 Replies)
I'm trying to write a shell script that accepts two file extensions as command line arguments and renames all files with the first extension within the current working directory to have the second extension instead. The script should print out error messages as is appropriate if there is any... (1 Reply)
Hello all,
We are running a 2 gig Solaris10 system. The only application that's running on the system is ours which allocates 850MB through malloc at one shot.
For some reason this malloc keeps failing saying "Resource Temporarily Unavilable"
After some investigation, found that it goes... (7 Replies)
Hello and thanks in advance.
I have a Sun box with raid 1 on the O/S disks using solaris svm.
I want to unmirror my swap partition, and add the slice on the second disk as an additional swap device. This would give me twice as much swap space.
I have been warned not to do this by some... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
I am running a script , working very fine on cmd prompt. The problem is that when I open do crontab -e even after setting editor to vi by
set EDITOR=vi it does not open a vi editor , rather it do as below.....
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////
$ set... (6 Replies)
I have a file (tmp.out) with contents delimited by '|':
1|d|2|rt|
3|sfd|4|sgf|
5|sg|6|gtr|
7|s|8|sf|
I want to write only the 1st and 3rd columns to another file, but they should be swapped with each other:
2|1
4|3
6|5
8|7
Here is what I have so far:
... (2 Replies)
Hi
I have an integrity machine rx7620 and rx8640 running hp-ux 11.31. I'm planning to fine tune the system:
- I would like to know when does the memory swap space spill over to the device swap space?
- And how much % of memory swap utilization should be specified (swap space device... (6 Replies)
Hi Solaris Folks :),
I need to calculate the swap usage on solaris server, please let me understand the output of below swap -s and swap -l commands.
$swap -s
total: 1774912k bytes allocated + 240616k reserved = 2015528k used, 14542512k available
$swap -l
swapfile dev swaplo... (6 Replies)
Hi,
I have a file with certain lines in it.
i want to swap every occurance of word A with B and every occurrance of word B with A.
Example
file.txt
Unix is a great OS.
Linux support graphical user intrface.
unix and linux are both same.
Output
file.txt
Linux is a great OS.
Unix... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Little
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
swapon
SWAPON(8) BSD System Manager's Manual SWAPON(8)NAME
swapon, swapoff, swapctl -- specify devices for paging and swapping
SYNOPSIS
swapon [-F fstab] -aLq | file ...
swapoff [-F fstab] -aLq | file ...
swapctl [-AghklmsU] [-a file ... | -d file ...]
DESCRIPTION
The swapon, swapoff and swapctl utilities are used to control swap devices in the system. At boot time all swap entries in /etc/fstab are
added automatically when the system goes multi-user. Swap devices use a fixed interleave; the maximum number of devices is unlimited. There
is no priority mechanism.
The swapon utility adds the specified swap devices to the system. If the -a option is used, all swap devices in /etc/fstab will be added,
unless their ``noauto'' or ``late'' option is also set. If the -L option is specified, swap devices with the ``late'' option will be added
as well as ones with no option. If the -q option is used, informational messages will not be written to standard output when a swap device
is added.
The swapoff utility removes the specified swap devices from the system. If the -a option is used, all swap devices in /etc/fstab will be
removed, unless their ``noauto'' or ``late'' option is also set. If the -L option is specified, swap devices with the ``late'' option will
be removed as well as ones with no option. If the -q option is used, informational messages will not be written to standard output when a
swap device is removed. Note that swapoff will fail and refuse to remove a swap device if there is insufficient VM (memory + remaining swap
devices) to run the system. The swapoff utility must move swapped pages out of the device being removed which could lead to high system
loads for a period of time, depending on how much data has been swapped out to that device.
Other options supported by both swapon and swapoff are as follows:
-F fstab
Specify the fstab file to use.
The swapctl utility exists primarily for those familiar with other BSDs and may be used to add, remove, or list swap devices. Note that the
-a option is used differently in swapctl and indicates that a specific list of devices should be added. The -d option indicates that a spe-
cific list should be removed. The -A and -U options to swapctl operate on all swap entries in /etc/fstab which do not have their ``noauto''
option set.
Swap information can be generated using the swapinfo(8) utility, pstat -s, or swapctl -l. The swapctl utility has the following options for
listing swap:
-h Output values in human-readable form.
-g Output values in gigabytes.
-k Output values in kilobytes.
-m Output values in megabytes.
-l List the devices making up system swap.
-s Print a summary line for system swap.
The BLOCKSIZE environment variable is used if not specifically overridden. 512 byte blocks are used by default.
FILES
/dev/{ada,da}?s?b standard paging devices
/dev/md? memory disk devices
/etc/fstab ASCII file system description table
DIAGNOSTICS
These utilities may fail for the reasons described in swapon(2).
SEE ALSO swapon(2), fstab(5), init(8), mdconfig(8), pstat(8), rc(8)HISTORY
The swapon utility appeared in 4.0BSD. The swapoff and swapctl utilities appeared in FreeBSD 5.1.
BSD November 22, 2013 BSD