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Full Discussion: Tutorial forum?
Contact Us Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators Tutorial forum? Post 63304 by deckard on Wednesday 23rd of February 2005 11:51:52 PM
Old 02-24-2005
Question Tutorial forum?

I got this account a while ago and didn't have much time to try it out. After having had some frustration by posting tutorials regarding various Linux activites of mine in my Slashdot journals, it occurred to me that this forum might be better suited. I know I can probably post in the OS specific or general forums, but I think that tutorials would get lost in the "one off" questions. Not to mention, I'm not really interested in writing HOWTOs that won't really get live input. I would like to request a tutorial forum(s) where users could post tutorials and others could interact with the author, ask questions or provide suggestions for improvment. Does this sound like a good idea, or is there already a section that would be appropriate for this where the volume of traffic is low enough that the tutorials wouldn't get lost in other posts?

Respectfully,
"Deck"
 

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gfs2_jadd(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      gfs2_jadd(8)

NAME
gfs2_jadd - Add journals to a GFS2 filesystem SYNOPSIS
gfs2_jadd [OPTION]... <DEVICE|MOINTPOINT>... DESCRIPTION
gfs2_jadd is used to add journals (and a few other per-node files) to a GFS2 filesystem. When this operation is complete, the journal index is updated so that machines mounting the filesystem at a later date will see the newly created journals in addition to the journals already there. Machines which are already running in the cluster are unaffected. You may only run gfs2_jadd on a mounted filesystem, addition of journals to unmounted filesystems is not supported. You only need to run gfs2_jadd on one node in the cluster. All the other nodes will see the expansion has occurred when required. You must be superuser to execute gfs2_jadd. The gfs2_jadd tool tries to prevent you from corrupting your filesystem by checking as many of the likely problems as it can. When growing a filesystem, only the last step of updating the journal index affects the currently mounted filesystem and so failure part way through the expansion process should leave your filesystem in its original state. OPTIONS
-c MegaBytes Initial size of each journal's quota change file -D Print out debugging information about the filesystem layout. -h Prints out a short usage message and exits. -J size The size of the new journals in megabytes. The defaults to 32MB (the minimum size allowed is 8MB). If you want to add journals of different sizes to the filesystem, you'll need to run gfs2_jadd once for each different size of journal. -j num The number of new journals to add. -q Be quiet. Don't print anything. -u MegaBytes Initial size of each journal's unlinked tag file -V Version. Print version information, then exit. SEE ALSO
mkfs.gfs2(8) gfs2_grow(8) gfs2_jadd(8)
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