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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Ls directory size reporting byte size instead of file count Post 302881860 by Don Cragun on Thursday 2nd of January 2014 11:31:38 AM
Old 01-02-2014
The ls utility will show you the data that it gets from doing the equivalent of a stat() system call on the directory. Some filesystems report the size of a directory as the space the directory consumes; some report the size of a directory as the number of files in the directory. What you are seeing is that a different file system is being used on your new storage device than was used on the previous device.
 

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set directory to skulk(1m)												set directory to skulk(1m)

NAME
set directory to skulk - Starts the skulk of a directory immediately SYNOPSIS
cdscp set directory directory-name to skulk ARGUMENTS
The full name of the directory. DESCRIPTION
The set directory to skulk command starts the skulk of a directory immediately. The CDS control program prompt cdscp> does not return until the skulk is complete. The amount of time for the skulk to complete is dependent on the location, number, and availability of repli- cas of the directory. Privilege Required You must have administer, write, insert, or delete permission to the directory. The server principal needs administer, read, and write permission to the directory. NOTE
This command is replaced at Revision 1.1 by the dcecp command and may not be provided in future releases of DCE. EXAMPLE
The following command initiates a skulk on the /.:/admin directory: cdscp> set directory /.:/admin to skulk RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: add directory(1m), create directory(1m), delete directory(1m), list directory(1m), remove directory(1m), set directory to new epoch(1m), show directory(1m) set directory to skulk(1m)
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