I had Solaris 8 installed on a Ultra 10 machine but during a shutdown the root partition got corrupted. I have 3 other partitions on the drive (var, swap, home). Is there a way to reinstall the root partition without effecting the other partitions?
Also, when I run format from single user mode I... (4 Replies)
I have a freebsd email server which is running out of space on /usr.
du doesn't show any large directories, but df confirms that the partition is running out of space. Is there a way to find out if there is an idle process tying up disk space.
Also, what happens when /usr is full, will... (0 Replies)
I'm mirroring up a T2000. Able to metainit and metattach all partitions with the exception of root. Getting the following error:
metattach: <hostname>; c1t1d0s0; is mounted on /
I'm stumped. By the way, target 1 is the boot disk. (7 Replies)
Hi guys
I am running AIX 5.3 and a newbie to it.
And I am getting reports telling me that the Root Directory is reaching almost max capacity, can someone give m some advice to find out what files are causing it to grow? , or how I can identify the growing files?
Thanks (6 Replies)
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)
Dear all,
I have a root partition which is 20 G in size. I have var and /tmp as seperate file systems. But this 20 G of root is not sufficeint.
I want to increase the size of the / partition.
Is there any way to increase with out down time.
my df -k output is
Filesystem ... (4 Replies)
i am using redhat 5.4 and my root size shows 98 %, how can i increase root size
# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda2 77G 16G 75G 98% /
/dev/sda1 2.4G 82M 2.2G 4% /boot
tmpfs 3.8G 0 3.8G 0%... (8 Replies)
Hello guys,
I am using Solaris 10 x86 OS. While installing OS i have allocated entire 10 GB space to the root. Now i am not able to create new partition it says me "out of range" or "<cylinder number> not expected". Can someone please help me to allocated a default recommended space i.e 8GB or... (2 Replies)
I can see that my root partition is down to single-digit GB free out of 134GB root partition on a larger server with many SAN, NFS, LOFS mounts etc mounted at the root (/) partition.
How can I specifically tell which directories is causing the most utilization in my root (/) partition? (3 Replies)
Dear Concern,
I am new in ubuntu. Is root user disable in ubuntu? Also, is os partition default in ubuntu? I don't find any feature to create customize mount point to install OS.
Below is my current OS partition.
amirislam@blnidapp03:~$ df -h
Filesystem Size Used... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: makauser
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
gcore
gcore(1) User Commands gcore(1)NAME
gcore - get core images of running processes
SYNOPSIS
gcore [-pgF] [-o filename] [-c content] process-id...
DESCRIPTION
The gcore utility creates a core image of each specified process. By default, the name of the core image file for the process whose process
ID is process-id will be core.process-id.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-c content Produces core image files with the specified content. The content description uses the same tokens as in coreadm(1M). The
-c option does not apply to cores produced due to the -p or -g flags.
-F Force. Grabs the target process even if another process has control.
-g Produces core image files in the global core file repository with the global content as configured by coreadm(1M). The com-
mand will fail if the user does not have permissions to the global core file repository.
-o filename Substitutes filename in place of core as the first part of the name of the core image files. filename can contain the same
tokens to be expanded as the paths in coreadm(1M).
-p Produces a core image file in the process-specific location with the process-specific content for each process as config-
ured by coreadm(1M). The command will fail if the user does not have permissions to the per-process core file repository.
OPERANDS
The following operand is supported:
process-id process ID
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 On success.
non-zero On failure, such as non-existent process ID.
FILES
core.process-id core images
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWtoo |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |See below. |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
Command Syntax is Evolving. Output Format(s) are Unstable.
SEE ALSO kill(1), coreadm(1M), setrlimit(2), core(4), proc(4), attributes(5)NOTES
gcore is unaffected by the setrlimit(2) system call using the RLIMIT_CORE value.
SunOS 5.10 11 Feb 2004 gcore(1)