Hello ,
I 've got a problem with the root partition on my SCO 5.0.5 .
When I check the disk with df or mount , I can 't see the root filesystem .
# mount
/stand on /dev/boot read only on Tue Sep 05 16:13:51 2006
/home on /dev/home read/write on Tue Sep 05 16:14:41 2006
But , if I try... (3 Replies)
How can I check which partition /usr are mounted on ? Usually this is mounted on root (/). If I want to move /usr to another partition, how do I do this ?
BR Ludwig (1 Reply)
Dear All
Anyone can help me what is the problem of swap partition? swap partition is showing mounted in df -h command output.
Regards
prakash (1 Reply)
I'd like to make a wrapper bash script that will make sure that an nfs mount is mounted before launching a program that depends on the mount being active. Basically:
1) Check to see if the mount is active
2) If it's not active, try to mount it
3) If it won't mount because the nfs server is... (3 Replies)
Hi there,
I am able to check which parition from Storage > Disk Management
How is it possible to check if the folder is mounted on which partition. (1 Reply)
Hi
I need to have a piece of code that check if all file systems are mounted or not.
I have to pieces of information like the output of the bdfcommand, and the file /etc/fstab.
The first is:
bdf
Filesystem kbytes used avail %used Mounted on
/dev/vg00/lvol3 2097152 266656... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have the following piece of code, running on a solaris 10 O.S., that is not working for NFS file systems:
for vol in `grep -E 'vxfs|ufs|nfs' /etc/vfstab | egrep -v '^#' | awk '{ print $3 }'`
do
if df -k $vol | grep $vol > /dev/null
then
outputOK "Filesystem: $vol mounted"
else... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: fretagi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
resize_lfs
RESIZE_LFS(8) BSD System Manager's Manual RESIZE_LFS(8)NAME
resize_lfs -- resize a mounted log-structured filesystem
SYNOPSIS
resize_lfs [-v] [-s new-size] mounted-file-system
DESCRIPTION
resize_lfs grows or shrinks a mounted log-structured filesystem to the specified size. mounted-file-system is the name of the filesystem to
be resized, and new-size is the desired new filesystem size, in sectors. If new-size is not specified, resize_lfs will default to the cur-
rent size of the partition containing the filesystem in question.
When growing, the partition must be large enough to contain a filesystem of the specified size; when shrinking, resize_lfs must first
``clean'' the segments that will be invalid when the filesystem is shrunk. If this cleaning process results in these segments becoming
redirtied, this indicates that the given new size is not large enough to contain the existing filesystem data, and resize_lfs will return an
error.
EXAMPLES
To resize the file system mounted at /home to 32576 sectors:
resize_lfs -s 32576 /home
SEE ALSO fsck_lfs(8), lfs_cleanerd(8), newfs_lfs(8)HISTORY
The resize_lfs command first appeared in NetBSD 3.0.
AUTHORS
Konrad Schroder <perseant@NetBSD.org>
BUGS
resize_lfs should be able to resize an unmounted filesystem as well.
BSD September 4, 2006 BSD