Is there a way to identify a directory as the start of an NFS mountpoint in HPUX 11.0? Using existing utilities & without root priv.
If you stat the directory and use the S_ISNWK macro you can find network special files that way. The requirement will have to go through other channels if I need... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I am restoring the existing mount point on Solaris and getting below mentioned error
mount: /dev/dsk/c0t2d0s6 is already mounted or /billing is busy
I uses truss command to see the output and snapshot is below. Please help me to restore the mount point,
# truss -fa mount -F... (3 Replies)
Hello.
What's the best way to ensure that a NFS filesystem mounted from a disk-cabine (NAS) is accessible?
My proposal:
1. ping to the ip of the cabine
2. verify filesystem is mounted
3. touch a file inside the /mountpoint
Any other suggestions?
Thank you! (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I am new to System/plat-form administration work. Right now I am facing some issues while creating the filesystem and mounpoint. I am using Linux 6.0 SuSE 11. Last time I was used one command to partition the given space along with filesystem in SuSE 9 and it was done in GUI mode but... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I need to get the lv mountpoint from the hdisk directly (from vgda i guess) and not from odm or /etc/filesystems
I knew the command, but unfortunately I forgot it ;)
cheers funksen (5 Replies)
One of our mountpoint shows 100% but we have less data on that mountpoint. Pls help me to find which data/process holds the space.
bash-3.00$ cd /oracle/server_software/oracle10
bash-3.00$ du -sh *
0K admin
260M app
0K flash_recovery_area
0K lost+found
0K oradata
... (6 Replies)
Can some one help me i try to mkfs new mountpoint from storageIBM but give some problem
# mkfs -t ext3 /dev/sdd1
mke2fs 1.39 (29-May-2006)
/dev/sdd1 is apparently in use by the system; will not make a filesystem here!
my os is redhat 5.3
using fdisk
# fdisk -l
Disk /dev/sda: 298.9... (4 Replies)
Hello,
I need to create mountpoint in linux from rawdevices without using lv's.
Please help me with the steps to do this.
Best regards,
Vishal (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: admin_db
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
script
script(1) General Commands Manual script(1)NAME
script - make typescript of terminal session
SYNOPSIS
[file]
DESCRIPTION
makes a typescript of everything printed on your terminal. It starts a shell named by the environment variable, or by default and silently
records a copy of output to your terminal from that shell or its descendents, using a pseudo-terminal device (see pty(7)).
All output is written to file, or appended to file if the option is given. If no file name is given, the output is saved in a file named
The recording can be sent to a line printer later with lp(1), or reviewed safely with the option of cat(1).
The recording ends when the forked shell exits (or the user ends the session by typing "exit") or the shell and all its descendents close
the pseudo-terminal device.
This program is useful when operating a CRT display and a hard-copy record of the dialog is desired. It can also be used for a simple form
of session auditing.
respects the convention for login shells as described in su(1), sh(1), and ksh(1). Thus, if it is invoked with a command name beginning
with a hyphen (that is, passes a basename to the shell that is also preceded by a hyphen.
The input flow control can be enabled by setting environmental variable before running Please see section for details on using this envi-
ronment variable.
EXAMPLES
Save everything printed on the user's screen into file
Append a copy of everything printed to the user's screen to file
WARNINGS
A command such as which displays the contents of the destination file, should not be issued while executing because it would cause to log
the output of the command to itself until all available disk space is filled. Other commands, such as more(1), can cause the same problem
but to a lesser degree.
records all received output in the file, including typing errors, backspaces, and cursor motions. Note that it does not record typed char-
acters; only echoed characters. Thus passwords are not recorded in the file. Responses other than simple echoes (such as output from
screen-oriented editors and command editing) are recorded as they appeared in the original session.
When there is no input flow control is not set), there can be some data loss while using However, script(1) can behave unexpectedly, if is
set and is not set.
AUTHOR
was developed by the University of California, Berkeley and HP.
script(1)