sometimes in Solaris 8 when I go to mount filesystems using either the mount command or by editing the /etc/vfstab, i get a nice little error message saying the the number of allowable mount points has been exceeded. I have read man pages until I am blue in the face and no where can I find what the... (3 Replies)
hi
i tried to tar a directory in my server but it show ensufficient space.
therefore i tried to save it to a mount point using
tar /mountpoint/newfilename file2btar
but it gives me permission denied.
i am using the root account to do this.
is it possible to tar files and put it to mounted... (3 Replies)
How do I make a mount point reconnect at boot without editing /etc/fstab? Is there an option (or switch) to make this persistent when issuing the mount command from a client? (1 Reply)
Hi
Solaris 10
On server A, there is a directory called data with 10 files. This data directory has a further 3 subdirectories, gl, pay, contract (for example)
On server B, I want to see the server A data directory
commands used:
on server A, share -F nfs -o ro -d "<description">... (1 Reply)
When taking a snap, I have a script that stops any active snap. When running the script, I'm getting a message that u02 and u04 are already mounted.
How can I find out what process(es) is/are latching on the these mount points?
Thank you for your time. (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have some issue with the mounting/unmounting on my sun solaris box.
Actually their is one script that mount the file system take the backup of databases and unmount the file system.Last week this script failed to mount the file system with the below error message:
+ echo fs_check.sh:... (1 Reply)
hi,
I believe a mount point does not have to be a physical disk, but rather a logical one? Is this correct? if so, how can I find out if my mount points are on different physical disks?
thanks (9 Replies)
Hi folks,
I have been asked to performed the following:
Add the following new moint points systemA:/avp and SystemB:/usr/sap/trans to be the new linux server ZZZ
How can I add those mount points and how those mount points can become another linuz server?:wall::wall::wall: (2 Replies)
We have about 5 different SVN repositories running on SVN 1.6.11 on top of CentOS Linux 6.3. I was asked to migrate our SVN server to a new server last week. We have a cron job that does a Full backup of each repo once a week, and every other night we do an incremental backup via svnadmin dump... (1 Reply)
I am using RHEL 6, but with no RHN subscription. I tried installing the EPEL repo, it is enabled under yum repolist but when I try a sample search such as yum search nginx , there's a string of errno 14 PYCURL error 6 .
When I tried yum list installed, it didn't work because it defaults to the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Hijanoqu
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
svnpath
SVNPATH(1)SVNPATH(1)NAME
svnpath - output svn url with support for tags and branches
SYNOPSIS
svnpath
svnpath tags
svnpath branches
svnpath trunk
DESCRIPTION
svnpath is intended to be run in a Subversion working copy.
In its simplest usage, svnpath with no parameters outputs the svn url for the repository associated with the working copy.
If a parameter is given, svnpath attempts to instead output the url that would be used for the tags, branches, or trunk. This will only
work if it's run in the top-level directory that is subject to tagging or branching.
For example, if you want to tag what's checked into Subversion as version 1.0, you could use a command like this:
svn cp $(svnpath) $(svnpath tags)/1.0
That's much easier than using svn info to look up the repository url and manually modifying it to derive the url to use for the tag, and
typing in something like this:
svn cp svn+ssh://my.server.example/svn/project/trunk svn+ssh://my.server.example/svn/project/tags/1.0
svnpath uses a simple heuristic to convert between the trunk, tags, and branches paths. It replaces the first occurrence of trunk, tags, or
branches with the name of what you're looking for. This will work ok for most typical Subversion repository layouts.
If you have an atypical layout and it does not work, you can add a ~/.svnpath file. This file is perl code, which can modify the path in
$url. For example, the author uses this file:
#!/usr/bin/perl
# svnpath personal override file
# For d-i I sometimes work from a full d-i tree branch. Remove that from
# the path to get regular tags or branches directories.
$url=~s!d-i/(rc|beta)[0-9]+/!!;
$url=~s!d-i/sarge/!!;
1
LICENSE
GPL version 2 or later
AUTHOR
Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net>
Debian Utilities 2013-12-23 SVNPATH(1)