In VG01 there are three mount point each of 100gb size. There is no data on below mount point
Is it possible to resize each of these mount point to 50 GB. So 150 GB will free and release from VG01. I need 150 GB free space to create new VG, VG03.
I am new to HP Unix.
Request you to please suggest steps to do above activity.
Thanks,
Nirav
Last edited by methyl; 08-29-2012 at 06:52 PM..
Reason: please use code tags
Hey all, is it possible to free up space off some partitions? during an install of hp-ux i set some allocated diskspace to lets say, /home to 1024 mb, but now i want it to be 512mb..
I'm looking at sam right now at the "Disks and File Systems" menu , can i modify it at all in like, List-> file... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I have logical volume group of 50GB, in which I have 2 logical volumes, LogVol01 and LogVol02, both are of 10GB.
If I extend LogVol01 further by 10GB, then it keeps the extended copy after logical volume 2. I want to know where it keeps this information
Regards
Himanshu (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a problem with vxvm volume which is mirror with two disks. when i am try to increase file system, it is throwing an ERROR: can not allocate 5083938 blocks, ERROR: can not able to run vxassist on this volume.
Please find a sutable solutions.
Thanks and Regards
B. Nageswar... (0 Replies)
Hi!
Can anyone help me on how I can do a basic check on the Unix filesystems / physical volumes and logical volumes?
What items should I check, like where do I look at in smit? Or are there commands that I should execute?
I need to do this as I was informed by IBM that there seems to be... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I am a french computer technician, and i speak English just a little.
On Aix 5.3, I encounter a name conflict logical volume on two volume group.
The first volume lvnode01 is OK in rootvg and mounted. It is also consistent in the ODM
root # lsvg -l rootvg |grep lvnode01 ... (10 Replies)
Hiii,
Can any one sugge me best practices for resizing a veritas voulume with vxfs file system?
I tried doing this
vxassist -g stg shrinkto stgvol 209715200
VxVM vxassist ERROR V-5-1-7236 Shrinking a FSGEN or RAID5 usage type volume can result in loss of data. It is recommended... (1 Reply)
I have a machine (5.10 Generic_142900-03 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V210) that we are upgrading the storage and my task is to mirror what is already on the machine to the new disk. I have the disk, it is labeled and ready but I am not sure of the next steps to mirror the existing diskgroup and... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I am new to unix. I am working on Red Hat Linux and side by side on AIX also. After reading the concepts of Storage, I am now really confused regarding the terminologies
1)Physical Volume
2)Volume Group
3)Logical Volume
4)Physical Partition
Please help me to understand these concepts. (6 Replies)
Hello Guys,
I want to create a file system dedicated for an application installation. But there is no space in volume group to create a new logical volume. There is enough space in other logical volume which is being mounted on /var.
I know we can use that logical volume and create a virtual... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I am running ubuntu 14.04.
Have just installed torrent into home directory but /dev/md2 is almost full.
Is it possible to resize md2 to get rid of any problem that may arise in the near future?
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev 17G 4.1k 17G 1% /dev... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MINIX
mount
MOUNT(2) System Calls Manual MOUNT(2)NAME
mount, umount - mount or umount a file system
SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/mount.h>
int mount(char *special, char *name, int flag)
int umount(char *name)
DESCRIPTION
Mount() tells the system that the file system special is to be mounted on the file name, effectively overlaying name with the file tree on
special. Name may of any type, except that if the root of special is a directory, then name must also be a directory. Special must be a
block special file, except for loopback mounts. For loopback mounts a normal file or directory is used for special, which must be seen as
the root of a virtual device. Flag is 0 for a read-write mount, 1 for read-only.
Umount() removes the connection between a device and a mount point, name may refer to either of them. If more than one device is mounted
on the same mount point then unmounting at the mount point removes the last mounted device, unmounting a device removes precisely that
device. The unmount will only succeed if none of the files on the device are in use.
Both calls may only be executed by the super-user.
SEE ALSO mount(1), umount(1).
AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl)
MOUNT(2)