Perhaps something in a simple loop will do the job:-
Code:
#!/bin/ksh
RC=0
typeset -Z20 counter=0
if [ ! -d hog ]
then
mkdir hog
fi
until [ $RC -ne 0 ]
do
((counter=$counter+1))
echo "Hello" > hog/hogfile_counter
RC=$?
done
This will write vast numbers of files until either the space of the i-nodes are exhausted and no new files can be created. You can simply delete the entire hog directory to clean up.
If you want to ensure that you fill space, you could:-
You can then delete hogfile and hogtemp? to free the space.
Both will take quite a while as the IO is probably expensive.
To set a limit, perhaps you could change the loop not to check the return code, but to do a df and get the current value. You can then test if it is over a predetermined limit.
first of all, sorry about my english...I´m a spanish newbie to this marvelous OS and i have just a couple of doubts...u know? :-)
1) how big should my swap partition be if i installed debian 2.2r3 or FreeBSD 4.x on a AMD k7 1400Mhz with 512Mb of Random Access Memory?
i heard that those OS... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I am trying to monitor disk space for each node on the machine. I am able to get all individual nodes but for the '/' node. For example:
df -k:
bash-2.05b# df -k
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/xxx 4127108 2415340 1502120 62% /
/dev/yyy ... (3 Replies)
Hi everybody,
I want to know if there is any posibility to find out - on an AIX system - which are the the users who consume most space or at least a posibility to obtain a list with all the users and how much space are they consuming ?
Trying to use du command was useless. Any idea?... (5 Replies)
Dear Friends ,
I am using Redhat Ent Linux 5.0 with a EMC storage which HDD space is 4 TB. After Installing RHEL 5 , I get 4 TB space available but when I am going to create a partition then the OS show 2TB available space . I cannot create a partition above 2TB space . Is there any limitation... (3 Replies)
hi
My System is Sun Microsystems Inc. SunOS 5.10 Solaris
Partition Info is
/dev/vx/dsk/bootdg/var
27G 25G 1.2G 96% /var
/dev/vx/dsk/bootdg/oravol
110G 54G 56G 49% /export/home
I want to shift space 20G from /export/home to /var
What should be the command ?? (2 Replies)
I am planning to install slack 13.37 on an old stand-alone PIII (512 mb ram) with 17 gb disk space. I need to keep lotsa pdf, chm type e-books for programming with few other misc. documents.
I'm going to use this system for my personal use.
It has no network but I browse internet with cable... (0 Replies)
Hi OS Experts
I would like to increase root partition from another partition so that I can save more documents in Home and Desktop. whether it is possible without formating root partition if so please explain
here is o/p of df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda9... (8 Replies)
Hello All,
I'm having trouble finding info on how to convert sector size (*if that's really what i want to do?) to something easier to understand.
I'm trying to copy the MBR from a bootable SD Card to another SD Card or image file, but I'm not sure what I should use in my dd command since I'm... (17 Replies)
I have a RHEL 5.3 machine with the following partitions and free space:
Free space on the partitions
/ : 74GB
/boot : 81MB
/var : 73GB
/home : 37GB
/icat : 758MB
/opt : 1.5GB
Now is it possible to allot a free space of some other partitions to /opt? I want around 100 GB more space... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: omniok
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
pmc_control
PMC_CONTROL(2) BSD System Calls Manual PMC_CONTROL(2)NAME
pmc_control, pmc_get_info -- Hardware Performance Monitoring Interface
LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/pmc.h>
int
pmc_control(int ctr, int op, void *argp);
int
pmc_get_info(int ctr, int op, void *argp);
DESCRIPTION
pmc_get_info() returns the number of counters in the system or information on a specified counter ctr. The possible values for op are:
PMC_INFO_NCOUNTERS
When querying the number of counters in the system, ctr is ignored and argp is of type int *. Upon return, the integer pointed to by
argp will contain the number of counters that are available in the system.
PMC_INFO_CPUCTR_TYPE
When querying the type of a counter in the system, ctr refers to the counter being queried, and argp is of type int *. Upon return,
the integer pointed to by argp will contain the implementation-dependent type of the specified counter.
If ctr is -1, the integer pointed to by argp will contain the machine-dependent type describing the CPU or counter configuration.
PMC_INFO_COUNTER_VALUE
When querying the value of a counter in the system, ctr refers to the counter being queried, and argp is of type uint64_t *. Upon
return, the 64-bit integer pointed to by argp will contain the value of the specified counter.
PMC_INFO_ACCUMULATED_COUNTER_VALUE
When querying the value of a counter in the system, ctr refers to the counter being queried, and argp is of type uint64_t *. Upon
return, the 64-bit integer pointed to by argp will contain the sum of the accumulated values of specified counter in all exited sub-
processes of the current process.
pmc_control() manipulates the specified counter ctr in one of several fashions. The op parameter determines the action taken by the kernel
and also the interpretation of the argp parameter. The possible values for op are:
PMC_OP_START
Starts the specified ctr running. It must be preceded by a call with PMC_OP_CONFIGURE. argp is ignored in this case and may be NULL.
PMC_OP_STOP
Stops the specified ctr from running. argp is ignored in this case and may be NULL.
PMC_OP_CONFIGURE
Configures the specified ctr prior to running. argp is a pointer to a struct pmc_counter_cfg.
struct pmc_counter_cfg {
pmc_evid_t event_id;
pmc_ctr_t reset_value;
uint32_t flags;
};
event_id
is the event ID to be counted.
reset_value
is a value to which the counter should be reset on overflow (if supported by the implementation). This is most useful when
profiling (see PMC_OP_PROFSTART, below). This value is defined to be the number of counter ticks before the next overflow.
So, to get a profiling tick on every hundredth data cache miss, set the event_id to the proper value for ``dcache-miss'' and
set reset_value to 100.
flags Currently unused.
PMC_OP_PROFSTART
Configures the specified ctr for use in profiling. argp is a pointer to a struct pmc_counter_cfg as in PMC_OP_CONFIGURE, above. This
request allocates a kernel counter, which will fail if any process is using the requested counter. Not all implementations or coun-
ters may support this option.
PMC_OP_PROFSTOP
Stops the specified ctr from being used for profiling. argp is ignored in this case and may be NULL.
RETURN VALUES
A return value of 0 indicates that the call succeeded. Otherwise, -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
Among the possible error codes from pmc_control() and pmc_get_info() are
[EFAULT] The address specified for the argp is invalid.
[ENXIO] Specified counter is not yet configured.
[EINPROGRESS] PMC_OP_START was passed for a counter that is already running.
[EINVAL] Specified counter was invalid.
[EBUSY] If the requested counter is already in use--either by the current process or by the kernel.
[ENODEV] If and only if the specified counter event is not valid for the specified counter when configuring a counter or starting
profiling.
[ENOMEM] If the kernel is unable to allocate memory.
SEE ALSO pmc(1), pmc(9)HISTORY
The pmc_control() and pmc_get_info() system calls appeared in NetBSD 2.0.
BSD October 27, 2005 BSD