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Operating Systems Solaris Help understanding this SunOs 5.10 Filesystem. Post 302708877 by RedSpyder on Wednesday 3rd of October 2012 09:32:34 AM
Old 10-03-2012
Quote:
Originally Posted by bartus11
This filesystem is mounted on "/export/home". To check what is taking space there, run:
Code:
cd /export/home
du -sk *

I was able to identify the file: a backup folder. Was able to get it down to 66% capacity. Thanks! Smilie

---------- Post updated 10-03-12 at 09:02 AM ---------- Previous update was 10-02-12 at 10:18 AM ----------

One more question:
Code:
oslocal                100G    18K    25G     1%    /oslocal
app/smart               95G    42K    95G     1%    /smart

These two mounting points have free space. Their owner group is root:root.
I tried to touch a file there but it wouldnt let me because of permissions.

How can I make it so I can create files there with my regular user? Changing the owner to the regular user?

Whats the best approach.
 

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console.perms(5)					   System Administrator's Manual					  console.perms(5)

NAME
console.perms - permissions control file for users at the system console DESCRIPTION
/etc/security/console.perms determines the permissions that will be given to priviledged users of the console at login time, and the per- missions to which to revert when the users log out. It is read by the pam_console module. The format is: <class>=space-separated list of words login-regexp|<login-class> perm dev-glob|<dev-class> revert-mode revert-owner[.revert-group] The revert-mode, revert-owner, and revert-group fields are optional, and default to 0600, root, and root, respectively. The words in a class definition are evaluated as globs if they refer to files, but as regular expressions if they apply to a console defi- nition. Do not mix them. Any line can be broken and continued on the next line by using a character as the last character on the line. The login-class class and the login-regexp word are evaluated as regular expressions. The dev-class and the dev-glob word are evaluated as shell-style globs. If a name given corresponds to a directory, and if it is a mount point listed in /etc/fstab, the device node associated with the filesystem mounted at that point will be substituted in its place. Classes are denoted by being contained in < angle bracket > characters; a lack of < angle brackets > indicates that the string is to be taken literally as a login-regexp or a dev-glob, depending on its input position. SEE ALSO
pam_console(8) pam_console_apply(8) console.apps(5) AUTHOR
Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> Red Hat Software 1999/2/3 console.perms(5)
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