In VG01 there are three mount point each of 100gb size. There is no data on below mount point
Code:
/soft/01
/soft/02
/soft/03
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!
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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
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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.
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Hello,
I am running ubuntu 14.04.
Have just installed torrent into home directory but /dev/md2 is almost full.
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Discussion started by: baris35
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
fs_lsmount
FS_LSMOUNT(1) AFS Command Reference FS_LSMOUNT(1)NAME
fs_lsmount - Reports the volume for which a directory is the mount point.
SYNOPSIS
fs lsmount -dir <directory>+ [-help]
fs ls -d <directory>+ [-h]
DESCRIPTION
The fs lsmount command reports the volume for which each specified directory is a mount point, or indicates with an error message that a
directory is not a mount point or is not in AFS.
To create a mount point, use the fs mkmount command. To remove one, use the fs rmmount command.
OPTIONS -dir <directory>+
Names the directory that serves as a mount point for a volume. The last element in the pathname provided must be an actual name, not a
shorthand notation such as one or two periods ("." or "..").
-help
Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are ignored.
OUTPUT
If the specified directory is a mount point, the output is of the following form:
'<directory>' is a mount point for volume '<volume name>'
where
o A number sign ("#") precedes the <volume name> string for a regular mount point.
o A percent sign ("%") precedes the <volume name> string for a read/write mount point.
o A cell name and colon (":") follow the number or percent sign and precede the <volume name> string for a cellular mount point.
The fs mkmount reference page explains how the Cache Manager interprets each of the three types of mount points.
If the directory is a symbolic link to a mount point, the output is of the form:
'<directory>' is a symbolic link, leading to a mount point for volume
'<volume name>'
If the directory is not a mount point or is not in AFS, the output reads:
'<directory>' is not a mount point.
If the output is garbled, it is possible that the mount point has become corrupted in the local AFS client cache. Use the fs flushmount
command to discard it, which forces the Cache Manager to refetch the mount point.
EXAMPLES
The following example shows the mount point for the home directory of user "smith":
% fs lsmount /afs/abc.com/usr/smith
'/afs/abc.com/usr/smith' is a mount point for volume '#user.smith'
The following example shows both the regular and read/write mount points for the ABC Corporation cell's "root.cell" volume.
% fs lsmount /afs/abc.com
'/afs/abc.com' is a mount point for volume '#root.cell'
% fs lsmount /afs/.abc.com
'/afs/.abc.com' is a mount point for volume '%root.cell'
The following example shows a cellular mount point: the State University cell's "root.cell" volume as mounted in the ABC Corporation cell's
tree.
% fs lsmount /afs/stateu.edu
'/afs/stateu.edu' is a mount point for volume '#stateu.edu:root.cell'
PRIVILEGE REQUIRED
The issuer must have the "l" (lookup) permission on the ACL of the root directory of the volume that houses the file or directory named by
the -dir argument, and on the ACL of each directory that precedes it in the pathname.
SEE ALSO fs_flushmount(1), fs_mkmount(1), fs_rmmount(1)COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas
Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
OpenAFS 2012-03-26 FS_LSMOUNT(1)