Why 'too many' filesystems? How many do you have already? The OS will cope with many more than you could likely want.
You mention multiple SAN disks, and that makes me wonder a little. Are you worried that you would have to allocate a new disk from the SAN and use them directly as your filesystem? You should be building the provisioned storage into volume groups and slicing a filesystem of whatever size you want from that.
As a starter to help you, can you show us the output from:-
I want to have a permanent file created - and limit the size that this file can grow.. I want a circular file..
ie max size of file is 10 mb.. and if any new data written to file the oldest data removed..
How can I do this?
I am on solaris 9 x86 (3 Replies)
Hi,
I have a problem writing or copying a file 2GB or larger to either the second or third disk on my C8000. I've searched this forum and found some good information on this but still nothing to solve the problem.
I'm running hpux 11i, JFS3.3 and disk version 4 (from fstyp) on all 3 disks.
... (2 Replies)
Hi, I am not root, but I need to limit the size of my directory, so that it cannot contain more than 200M of stuff inside. Is this possible?
Also, how can I see the total size of that directory? If I do ls -ltrd, it does not give me the size of all the files inside the directory. And if I do df... (6 Replies)
Hello
I want to limit the size of a directory;
so a user cant copy more staff inside it then 5 Giga for example..
eg. /nfs/temp/jhon size can not increase more that 5Gb
I havnt found anything on the net. Is there a way to do it? (2 Replies)
Hi
i configured log rotate for a specific file.
/var/log/sauer
i configured create a file in logrotate.d
# cat /etc/logrotate.d/sauer
#this is a logrotate configuration file for msu_ng logs
/var/log/sauer {
rotate 5
size=1M
daily
compress
... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I want to store 32KB of file in Oracle DB into CLOB field. I am not able to insert more than 32KB of file into CLOB. So i want to put a limit on the file size. I am using k shell.
My file size will dynamically increase its size, i want to check the file size if it is more than 32KB... (1 Reply)
Hey everyone
I'm trying to limit the size a directory can be under Solaris 10. I can find plenty of guides to do it for user home directories, ut what I'm after is an absolute limit, regardless of the user.
For example:
I want /export/example/ to never pass say 5 GB, no matter what user is... (3 Replies)
To find the whole size of a particular directory i use "du -sk /dirname".. but after finding the direcory's size how do i make conditions like if the size of the dir is more than 1 GB i hav to delete some of the files inside the dir (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: shaal89
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
cacheinfo
CACHEINFO(5) AFS File Reference CACHEINFO(5)NAME
cacheinfo - Defines configuration parameters for the Cache Manager
DESCRIPTION
The cacheinfo file defines configuration parameters for the Cache Manager, which reads the file as it initializes.
The file contains a single line of ASCII text and must reside in the /etc/openafs directory. Use a text editor to create it during initial
configuration of the client machine; the required format is as follows:
<mount>:<cache>:<size>
where
<mount>
Names the local disk directory at which the Cache Manager mounts the AFS namespace. It must exist before the afsd program runs. The
conventional value is /afs. Using any other value prevents traversal of pathnames that begin with /afs (such as pathnames to files in
foreign cells that do use the conventional name). The -mountdir argument to the afsd command overrides this value.
<cache>
Names the local disk directory to use as a cache. It must exist before the afsd program runs. The standard value is /usr/vice/cache,
but it is acceptable to substitute a directory on a partition with more available space. Although the Cache Manager ignores this field
when configuring a memory cache, a value must always appear in it. The -cachedir argument to the afsd command overrides this value.
<size>
Specifies the cache size as a number of 1-kilobyte blocks. Larger caches generally yield better performance, but a disk cache must not
exceed 90% of the space available on the cache partition (85% for AIX systems), and a memory cache must use no more than 25% of
available machine memory.
The -blocks argument to the afsd command overrides this value. To reset cache size without rebooting on a machine that uses disk
caching, use the fs setcachesize command. To display the current size of a disk or memory cache between reboots, use the fs
getcacheparms command.
EXAMPLES
The following example cacheinfo file mounts the AFS namespace at /afs, establishes a disk cache in the /usr/vice/cache directory, and
defines cache size as 50,000 1-kilobyte blocks.
/afs:/usr/vice/cache:50000
SEE ALSO afsd(8), fs_getcacheparms(1), fs_setcachesize(1)COPYRIGHT
IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas
Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.
OpenAFS 2012-03-26 CACHEINFO(5)