I have a folder "Share" on A was NFS mounted to "B" server.
I have set the ACL permissions using setfacl , so that both (One user from Server A and another user from Server B) users can read and write to the directory.
Both users can create the files on the Share but if one user tries to delete the file created by another user then its showing warning
When i say y it deletes the file without issue.
How can i avoid the above message from displaying when non-owner is deleting the file, though he has access RWX to the parent folder
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)
:confused:Hi all
When i see in the /var/adm/messages, i saw the following error
unix: NFS write error on host : Stale NFS file handle.
unix: (file handle: 45ca415 3e7 a0000 2c7f6 3ebfc25f a0000 2 3e49)
It is using sunOS 5.7. Is anybody know what is this error?
Is is related to any network... (2 Replies)
Hi Peeps,
Trying to run analyze and verify on a disk, it won't as it's telling me the disk is write protected. Anyone got any ideas on how to remove the write protection????
Didn't even know you could write protect hard disks.
Thanks for any advice
Marty (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I created a nfs share in the server(Solaris 10) with the following command and also updated the dfstab file
share -F nfs -o rw=server_name2,anon=0 /to_share
And then in the client(solaris 10) added the following command to mount the share
mount -F nfs server_name1:/to_share... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am facing issue with one of the drive is solaris 10. it is showing offline in the messages file
scsi: WARNING: /pci@2,600000/QLGC,qlc@0/fp@0,0/ssd@w5006016746e00b1b,0 (ssd0):
drive offline
genunix: WARNING: Page83 data not standards compliant DGC LUNZ 0430
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have exported a few nfs mounts from one server to the nfs clients.
This is my nfs server dfstab :
# cat /etc/dfs/dfstab
# place share(1M) commands here for automatic execution
# on entering init state 3.
#
# share <pathname>
# .e.g,
# share -F... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: anaigini45
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT ULTRIX
rmf
rmf(1mh)rmf(1mh)Name
rmf - remove folder
Syntax
rmf [ +folder ] [ -help ] [ -[no]interactive ]
Description
The command removes all of the messages within the current folder, and then removes the folder itself. If there are any files within the
folder which are not part of MH, they are not removed, and an error message is displayed.
You can specify a folder other than the current folder by using the +folder argument. If you do not specify a folder, and cannot find the
current folder, asks you whether you want to delete instead.
If the current folder is removed, it makes current.
Note that the command irreversibly deletes messages that do not have other links, so use it with caution.
If the folder being removed is a sub-folder, the parent folder becomes the new current folder, and tells you that this has happened. This
provides an easy mechanism for selecting a set of messages, operating on the list, then removing the list and returning to the current
folder from which the list was extracted.
Using to delete a read-only folder deletes the private sequence and current message information from the file, without affecting the folder
itself. If you have sub-folders within a folder, you must delete all the sub-folders before you can delete the folder itself.
Options-help Prints a list of the valid options to this command.
-interactive
-nointeractive
Asks for confirmation before deleting a folder. By default, deletes a folder and its messages without asking for confirmation.
If you specify the -interactive option, asks if you are sure before deleting the folder. You are advised to use this option,
since when deletes a folder its contents are lost irretrievably.
Examples
This example shows how asks for confirmation when the -interactive option is used:
% rmf -interactive +test
Remove folder "test"? y
Profile Components
Path: To determine the user's Mail directory
Files
The user profile.
See Alsormm(1mh)rmf(1mh)