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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to consume all available space on partition? Post 302897667 by bbq on Tuesday 15th of April 2014 11:03:41 AM
Old 04-15-2014
How to consume all available space on partition?

Hi

I'm doing some resilience testing and need to write a script to consume all of the available disk space on a partition and then to free it up again.

This would need to be -

Safe
Dynamic, in that it calculates the free space prior to consuming it.
I might want to go on to consume a configurable percentage of it instead...

This would be on a Centos Linux box

Anyone have any experience in this area?

Brad
 

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SVHLABEL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       SVHLABEL(8)

NAME
svhlabel -- update disk label from SGI Volume Header SYNOPSIS
svhlabel [-fqrw] device DESCRIPTION
svhlabel is used to update a NetBSD disk label from the Silicon Graphics Volume Header on disks that were previously used on IRIX systems. svhlabel scans the Volume Header contained in the first blocks of the disk and generates additional partition entries for the disk from the entries found. Each Volume Header entry which does not have an equivalent partition in the disk label (equivalent in having the same size and offset) is added to the first free partition slot in the disk label. A free partition slot is defined as one with an fstype of 'unused' and a size of zero ('0'). If there are not enough free slots in the disk label, a warning will be issued. The raw partition (typically partition c, but d on i386 and some other platforms) is left alone during this process. By default, the proposed changed disk label will be displayed and no disk label update will occur. Available options: -f Force an update, even if there has been no change. -q Performs operations in a quiet fashion. -r In conjunction with -w, also update the on-disk label. You probably do not want to do this. -w Update the in-core label if it has been changed. SEE ALSO
disklabel(8), dkctl(8), mount_efs(8), sgivol(8) HISTORY
The svhlabel command appeared in NetBSD 5.0. BSD
February 26, 2007 BSD
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