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Operating Systems Linux Troubleshooting init.d script Post 303026238 by Neo on Thursday 22nd of November 2018 06:30:05 AM
Old 11-22-2018
Did you set the user and group of the script to root?
 

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

NAME
repquota -- summarize quotas for a file system SYNOPSIS
repquota [-h] [-g] [-n] [-u] [-v] filesystem ... repquota [-h] [-g] [-n] [-u] [-v] -a DESCRIPTION
The repquota utility prints a summary of the disk usage and quotas for the specified file systems. Available options: -a Print the quotas of all the file systems listed in /etc/fstab. -g Print only group quotas (the default is to print both group and user quotas if they exist). -h Display information in a more human readable format rather than in historic kilobyte format. -n Display user and group IDs numerically rather than converting to a user or group name. -u Print only user quotas (the default is to print both group and user quotas if they exist). -v Print a header line before printing each file system quotas. For each user or group, the current number files and amount of space is printed, along with any quotas created with edquota(8). Only members of the operator group or the super-user may use this command. FILES
quota.user at the file system root with user quotas quota.group at the file system root with group quotas /etc/fstab for file system names and locations DIAGNOSTICS
Various messages about inaccessible files; self-explanatory. SEE ALSO
quota(1), quotactl(2), fstab(5), edquota(8), quotacheck(8), quotaon(8) HISTORY
The repquota utility appeared in 4.2BSD. BSD
June 6, 1993 BSD
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