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Operating Systems Solaris How to safely copy full filesystems with large files (10Gb files) Post 302457257 by Scrutinizer on Monday 27th of September 2010 03:22:52 PM
Old 09-27-2010
Like Corona says, I there might be sparse files, perhaps temporary table space?. In that case dropping your temporary table space on the target file system and recreating it may turn it back into a sparse file...

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 09-27-2010 at 04:39 PM..
 

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ranhash(3x)															       ranhash(3x)

Name
       ranhashinit, ranhash, ranlookup - access routine for the symbol table definition file in archives

Syntax
       #include <ar.h>

       int ranhashinit(pran, pstr, size)
       struct ranlib *pran;
       char *pstr;
       int size;

       ranhash(name)
       char *name;

       struct ranlib *ranhash(name)
       char *name;

Description
       The  function initializes static information for future use by and The argument pran points to an array of ranlib structures.  The argument
       pstr points to the corresponding ranlib string table (these are only used by The argument size size is the  size  of  the  hash	table  and
       should be a power of 2. If the size is not a power of 2, a 1 is returned; otherwise, a 0 is returned.

       The function returns a hash number given a name. It uses a multiplicative hashing algorithm and the size argument to

       The  function  looks up name in the ranlib table specified by ranhashinit.  It uses the routine as a starting point. Then, it does a rehash
       from there.  This routine returns a pointer to a valid ranlib entry on a match.	If no matches are found (the "emptiness" can  be  inferred
       if  the	ran_off field is zero), the empty ranlib structure hash table should be sparse.  This routine does not expect to run out of places
       to look in the table.  For example, if you collide on all entries in the table, an error is printed tostderr and a zero is returned.

See Also
       ar(1), ar(5)

								       RISC							       ranhash(3x)
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