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Full Discussion: Chgrp failed on NAS mounted
Operating Systems Solaris Chgrp failed on NAS mounted Post 302894085 by naveen.surisett on Monday 24th of March 2014 02:27:21 AM
Old 03-24-2014
Chgrp failed on NAS mounted

Hi,

I am facing chgrp issue for a directory on a NAS mounted partation.

issue details :
user1 belongs to two groups grp1(primary) and grp2(secondary) not able to change directory group to secondary.


WORKING on /tmp
Code:
#mkdir /tmp/a
#ls -ld /tmp/a
drwxr-xr-x 2 user1 grp1 117 Mar 24 06:19 /tmp/a

#chgrp grp2 /tmp/a
#ls -ld /tmp/a
drwxr-xr-x 2 user1 grp2 117 Mar 24 06:19 /tmp/a

NOT Working on NFS share:
Code:
 
/home on nas2:/vx/home remote/read/write/setuid/devices/rstchown/xattr/dev=5140004 on Mon Mar 10 12:38:09 2014
 
#mkdir /home/user1/a 
#ls -ld /home/user1/a
drwxr-xr-x 2 user1 grp2 117 Mar 24 06:19 /home/user1/a
 
#chgrp grp2 /home/user1/a
chgrp: /home/user1/a: Not owner

Solaris patch level
Code:
SunOS ossmaster 5.10 Generic_150401-05 i86pc i386 i86pc

Any clue on this issue.

Thanks
Naveen

Last edited by Scott; 03-24-2014 at 03:38 AM.. Reason: Code tags
 

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cachefslog(1M)						  System Administration Commands					    cachefslog(1M)

NAME
cachefslog - Cache File System logging SYNOPSIS
cachefslog [-f logfile | -h] cachefs_mount_point DESCRIPTION
The cachefslog command displays where CacheFS statistics are being logged. Optionally, it sets where CacheFS statistics are being logged, or it halts logging for a cache specified by cachefs_mount_point. The cachefs_mount_point argument is a mount point of a cache file system. All file systems cached under the same cache as cachefs_mount_point will be logged. OPTIONS
The following options are supported. You must be super-user to use the -f and -h options. -f logfile Specify the log file to be used. -h Halt logging. OPERANDS
cachefs_mount_point A mount point of a cache file system. USAGE
See largefile(5) for the description of the behavior of cachefslog when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 2**31 bytes). EXAMPLES
Example 1: Checking the Logging of a directory. The example below checks if the directory /home/sam is being logged: example% cachefslog /home/sam not logged: /home/sam Example 2: Changing the logfile. The example below changes the logfile of /home/sam to /var/tmp/samlog: example# cachefslog -f /var/tmp/samlog /home/sam /var/tmp/samlog: /home/sam Example 3: Verifying the change of a logfile. The example below verifies the change of the previous example: example% cachefslog /home/sam /var/tmp/samlog: /home/sam Example 4: Halting the logging of a directory. The example below halts logging for the /home/sam directory: example# cachefslog -h /home/sam not logged: /home/sam EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 success non-zero an error has occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cachefsstat(1M), cachefswssize(1M), cfsadmin(1M), attributes(5), largefile(5) DIAGNOSTICS
Invalid path It is illegal to specify a path within a cache file system. SunOS 5.10 7 Feb 1997 cachefslog(1M)
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