hi people,
I'm trying to create a mount point, but am having no sucess at all, with the following:
mount -F ufs /dev/dsk/diskname /newdirectory
but i keep getting - mount-point /newdirectory doesn't exist.
What am i doing wrong/missing?
Thanks
Rc (1 Reply)
is there any command to know the list of mount points in a server.i need only the mount point lists.i tried using df but it was not helpful.i am using Solaris (1 Reply)
Hello, I have an AIX Oracle database server that I need to create a new filesystem/mount where I can create a new ORacle home to install 11g on. What are the needed steps to create this? There are mounts for Oracle 9i and 10g already. Thank you.
- David (7 Replies)
Dear Gurus,
Could it be possible to have the output of df -k sorted? The df -k output messed up after recent power trip.
Also, is there any folders that I should look into to reduce the root size (other than /var/adm and /var/crash) after server crash?
Many thanks in advance.
... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
we have an issue in bind mounting LINUX.
we are able to see the bound mounts in mount command and
df -h <file system name> but they are not visible in normal df -h command.
all these mounts are local mounts.
we have a /xyz is mount and abc is a directory in /xyz ( /xyz/abc )
... (1 Reply)
I have a sftp server running on Centos 5.10. It servers as upload/download interface for three users who basically are chrooted to three different locations.
User A -- > /home/REGIONA/
User B -- > /home/REGIONB/
User C -- > /home/REGIONC/
The users run certain application procedures on... (4 Replies)
How to create a new mount point with 600GB and add 350 GBexisting mount point
Best if there step that i can follow or execute before i mount or add diskspace IN AIX
Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Thilagarajan
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PLAN9
mnt
MNT(3) Library Functions Manual MNT(3)NAME
mnt - attach to 9P servers
SYNOPSIS
#M
DESCRIPTION
The mount driver is used by the mount system call (but not bind; see bind(2)) to connect the name space of a process to the service pro-
vided by a 9P server over a communications channel. After the mount, system calls involving files in that portion of the name space will
be converted by the mount driver into the appropriate 9P messages to the server.
The mount system call issues session and attach(5) messages to the server to identify and validate the user of the connection. Each dis-
tinct user of a connection must mount it separately; the mount driver multiplexes the access of the various users and their processes to
the service.
File-oriented system calls are converted by the kernel into messages in the 9P protocol. Within the kernel, 9P is implemented by procedure
calls to the various kernel device drivers. The mount driver translates these procedure calls into remote procedure calls to be transmit-
ted as messages over the communication channel to the server. Each message is implemented by a write of the corresponding protocol message
to the server channel followed by a read on the server channel to get the reply. Errors in the reply message are turned into system call
error returns.
A read(2) or write system call on a file served by the mount driver may be translated into more than one message, since there is a maximum
data size for a 9P message. The system call will return when the specified number of bytes have been transferred or a short reply is
returned.
The string is an illegal file name, so this device can only be accessed directly by the kernel.
SEE ALSO bind(2)SOURCE
/sys/src/9/port/devmnt.c
BUGS
When mounting a service through the mount driver, that is, when the channel being multiplexed is itself a file being served by the mount
driver, large messages may be broken in two.
MNT(3)