I am running solaris 10 with Veritas. I want to extend a filesystem. It's an oracle partition (/ora12). How can I find out if there is space available to expand the filesystem and then how does one extend it.
I'm from the HPUX world and so LVM was always how I did things.
Thanks
jackie (5 Replies)
OK I'm sure this question has been posed far too many times.
I have solaris 10 x86 with NO Veritas or Disksuite filesystems. Below is the output of df -k
# df -k
Filesystem kbytes used avail capacity Mounted on
/ 10485760 547513 9317128 6% /
/dev... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
currently , my root filesystem already reach 90 ++%
I already add more cylinder in the root partition as below
Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
0 root wm 67 - 5086 38.46GB (5020/0/0) 80646300
1 swap wu 1 - ... (11 Replies)
Hello
I need to expand a filesystem is full, but I understand that for this I need a volume manager like SVM or Veritas. I have installed solaris 10 but I give it a metastat and tells me there is no database, as if the installation does not have the sudmirrors attachments.
The filesystem... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone, im having a problem with the computation of the PP size for creating a filesystem.
for example my requirement is to create a new filesystem with 10gig of system on aix 5.1 and aix 5.3 system.
here's the result when i run lsvg vgSAN-sparkle
could any provide me an exact... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I wanted to find out that in my database server which filesystems are shared storage and which filesystems are local. Like when I use df -k, it shows "filesystem" and "mounted on" but I want to know which one is shared and which one is local.
Please tell me the commands which I can run... (2 Replies)
Dear all,
We are facing prolem when we are going to mount AIX filesystem, the system returned the following error
0506-307The AFopen call failed
: A file or directory in the path name does not exist.
But when we ls filesystems in the /etc/ directory it show
-rw-r--r-- 0 root ... (2 Replies)
Hello,
Need to ask the question regarding extending the zfs storage file system.
currently after using the command, df -kh
u01-data-pool/data 600G 552 48G 93% /data
/data are only 48 gb remaining and it has occupied 93% for total storage.
zpool u01-data-pool has more then 200 gb... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: shahzad53
14 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