I have a Solaris 7 box. We got a strange error in the syslog, which read as follows:
Nov 15 11:50:16 server-01 unix: NOTICE: free inode /mount1/8025691 had size 0x20d
I consulted with a fellow sysadmin, and he suggested running "fsck -N" on the filesystem in question without unmounting it. So I... (1 Reply)
I have a question and seek help. How many directory can be mounted on one file system on UNIX with solaris 9? For example, I have one file system as /dev/dsk/cieit0a6. I have created one directory as /u01/app/oracle and mounted this directory to cieit06. It works. Then I create another directory as... (4 Replies)
Hi friends,
In my case, there are serveral PCs running Linux in a LAN.
I would like to to mount the directory /A_river of machine-A to the file system of another machine machine-B so that I can access files in that directory.
I do not know how to do this. The situation is complicated by... (2 Replies)
Hello all,
can someone help on how can i check if all file system were mounted during reboot?
I know that we have first to look on /etc/vfstab; the containing of this one should be mounted during boot of system, and after with : df -k we can see if mentioned file system on vfstab were... (3 Replies)
Hi
I have a couple directories in my current working environment. i want to identify the remote mounted shares among them . for example
My current working directory contains folders
dir1 dir2 dir3 ..etc
dir1 is a remote share from server xyx
dir2 and dir3 are local folders
I... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I know something about file system that its a directory to hold files.
My query is how to identify file system is mounted or not .Can you give me some examples?
OS --- Linux 2.6 (7 Replies)
Dear friends,
I have been facing an issue with one of my red hat unix machine, suddenly lost to switch sudo users. My all colleagues lost to switch to access sudo users.
Then, we have realized its related to NAS issue which does not allowing to write the file. because of this we got so many... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Chand
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
copyfs-mount
COPYFS-MOUNT(1) User Commands COPYFS-MOUNT(1)NAME
copyfs-mount - mounts a versioned file system
SYNOPSIS
copyfs-mount version-directory mount-point
DESCRIPTION
This script lets you mount a CopyFS file system. version-directory is the directory where the files and version information will be stored
by CopyFS.
When using CopyFS for the first time, copyfs-mount will create the required files in the version-directory before running copyfs-daemon.
mount-point is the directory where the copyfs file system will be mounted. This is where the users will have access to the files.
If you want to mount a CopyFS at '/mnt/fs', whose version directory is at /var/versions, you would use:
root@host# copyfs-mount /var/versions /mnt/fs
To unmount it, simply do:
root@host# umount /mnt/fs
As you would do for any other filesystem.
You can also allow an ordinary non-root users to mount and unmount CopyFS filesystems provided that the user is added to the 'fuse' group.
Ordinary users will be able unmount the filesystem, using the fusermount command:
$ fusermount -u mount-point
AUTHORS
CopyFS was created by Thomas Joubert and Nicolas Vigier <boklm@mars-attacks.org>
LINKS
<http://n0x.org/copyfs/> CopyFS web site.
<http://fuse.sourceforge.net/> FUSE - Filesystem in USErspace
SEE ALSO copyfs(1), copyfs-fversion(1), copyfs-daemon(1), fusermount(1)copyfs-mount May 2008 COPYFS-MOUNT(1)