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Full Discussion: filesystems > 70%
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting filesystems > 70% Post 302530582 by eponcedeleonc on Tuesday 14th of June 2011 11:06:13 AM
Old 06-14-2011
This is just an example of what it looks like..
Code:
Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/rootvg-rootlv
                      5.0G  3.3G  1.4G  71% /
tmpfs                 4.0K     0  4.0K   0% /dev/vx
/dev/cciss/c0d0p1     251M   87M  152M  37% /boot
none                  7.9G     0  7.9G   0% /dev/shm
/dev/mapper/rootvg-homelv
                     1008M   34M  923M   4% /home
/dev/mapper/rootvg-optlv
                      2.0G 1021M  894M  54% /opt
/dev/mapper/rootvg-tmplv
                      3.0G  473M  2.4G  17% /tmp

 

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dev(7FS)							   File Systems 							  dev(7FS)

NAME
dev - Device name file system DESCRIPTION
The dev filesystem manages the name spaces of devices under the Solaris operating environment. The global zone's instance of the dev filesystem is mounted during boot on /dev. A subdirectory under /dev may have unique operational semantics. Most of the common device names under /dev are created automatically by devfsadm(1M). Others, such as /dev/pts, are dynamic and reflect the operational state of the system. You can manually generate device names for newly attached hardware by invoking devfsadm(1M) or implicitly, by indirectly causing a lookup or readdir operation in the filesystem to occur. For example, you can discover a disk that was attached when the system was powered down (and generate a name for that device) by invoking format(1M)). FILES
/dev Mount point for the /dev filesystem in the global zone. SEE ALSO
devfsadm(1M), format(1M), devfs(7FS) NOTES
The global /dev instance cannot be unmounted. SunOS 5.11 9 June 2006 dev(7FS)
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