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Special Forums Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions Integrate RHEL with Active Directory Post 302884226 by gull04 on Saturday 18th of January 2014 05:02:08 PM
Old 01-18-2014
Hi Stuart,

Our set-up is a bit unusual, we have 2 control nodes, running the GFS software on RHEL (for various reasons we had to back port the GFS code to an older version of RHEL) with 8 other nodes with NFS mounts of the GFS file systems.

These are exported again to a further 8 nodes - all are equal in the cluster.

Our desktop estate covers Windows XP, Windows 7, Mac OS/X and Centos - these authenticate against the active directory and if they login to any of the nodes then SSSD authenticates.

Regards

Gull04
 

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gfs_quota(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      gfs_quota(8)

NAME
gfs_quota - Manipulate GFS disk quotas SYNOPSIS
gfs_quota <list|sync|get|limit|warn|check|init> [OPTION]... DESCRIPTION
gfs_quota is used to examine and change quota values in a GFS filesystem. This command has a number of different actions. ACTIONS
list List the contents of the quota file. Only IDs that have a non-zero hard limit, warn limit, or value are printed. sync Sync any local quota changes to the quota file. get Get the current data for the ID specified by the -u or -g argument. limit Set the current hard limit for the ID specified by the -u or -g argument to the value specified by the -l argument on the specified filesystem. The filesystem won't let the user or group use more than this much space. A value of zero here means that no limit is enforced. warn Set the current warn limit for the ID specified by the -u or -g argument to the value specified by the -l argument on the specified filesystem. The filesystem will start complaining to the user or group when more than this much space is used. A value of zero here means that the user won't ever be warned. check Scan a filesystem and make sure that what's out there on the disk matches what's in the quota file. This is only accurate if the filesystem is idle when this is running. If there is a mismatch, it is printed to stdout. Note: GFS quotas are transactional and a quota check is not needed every time there is a system crash. init Scan a filesystem and initialize the quota file with the values obtained from the scan. The filesystem should be idle when this is run. You should only need to do this if you upgrade a pre-quota GFS filesystem (pre-GFS 5.1). OPTIONS
-b The units for disk space are filesystem blocks. -d Don't include the space allocated to GFS' hidden files in what's reported for the root UID and GID values. This is useful if you're trying to get the numbers reported by gfs_quota to match up with the numbers reported by du. -f Directory Specifies which filesystem to perform the action on. -g GID Specifies the group ID for get, limit, or warn. It can be either the group name from the group file, or the GID number. -h Print out a help message describing available options, then exit. -k The units for disk space are kilobytes. -l Size Specifies the new value for the limit or warn actions. The value is assumed to be in the units specified by the -m, -k, -s, -b arguments. The default is megabytes. -m The units for disk space are megabytes. This is the default. -n Don't try to resolve UIDs and GIDs into user and group names. -s The units for disk space are sectors (512-byte blocks). -u UID Specifies the user ID for get, limit, or warn. It can be either the username from the password file, or the UID number. -V Print program version information, then exit. EXAMPLE
To set the hard limit for user "nobody" to 1048576 kilobytes on filesystem /gfs0 gfs_quota limit -l 1048576 -k -u nobody -f /gfs0 gfs_quota(8)
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