05-11-2005
Perderabo - it will work - I've done it before booting into single user from the cd.
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
How to find the free size currently FileSystem has, on the disk mounted?
I know 'df' lists all the mounted disks, but I am interested to know details
for the filesystem, in which currently I am working. (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: videsh77
7 Replies
2. AIX
Dear ALL
Today I faced one problem in the file system, during invoking the command #df -k , I saw /usr reached to 95% Used, could any one give advice ?
thanks & regarded (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: magasem
7 Replies
3. Programming
I have the next code, and the output is incosistent, what is the problem:
free blocks: 1201595
block size: 4096
total size(free blocks * block size): 626765824
1201595 * 4096 not is 626765824, what's the problem???
#include <sys/statvfs.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(){
... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: lucaxvu
1 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi
Can anyone explain me how to increase the filesystem size. We can do it when the system is running? It needs an reboot? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rogerben
8 Replies
5. AIX
Hi all,
we are usig aix 4.3 and i need to increase the size of "/u01" file sytem which is mounted on logical volume "lv00", but "/u01" file system size is 9 GB and logical volume "lvoo" size 9 GB.how do i increase the size of /u01.do i increase the size of logical volume "lv00" and then... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: younusdba
2 Replies
6. Solaris
Hi,
We currently have an Oracle database running and it is creating lots of processes in the /proc directory that are 1000M in size. The size of the /proc directory is now reading 26T. How can this be if the root file system is only 13GB?
I have seen this before we an Oracle temp file... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcman
6 Replies
7. AIX
I need write a script to trace filesystem size change, such as /home will increase some size and then release some space. I don't know when increase happen. I want to get the size before increase and the size after release. How to write this script? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rainbow_bean
1 Replies
8. Shell Programming and Scripting
When I do df -h, I see that one of my partitions is out of space.
Then when I do du -h, I get thousands of files. How do I only look at files over a specific size. I want directories over 500m to be returned only. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: guessingo
2 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Dears,
the output of this command
df -h | tr -s ' ' | cut -f5 -d' '
is
capacity
24%
0%
0%
0%
0%
1%
0%
24%
24%
0%
93%
1% (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: xxmasrawy
4 Replies
10. Solaris
Hi,
I have recently taken up to support these SunOS 5.9 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V240 boxes and got a request to increase the size of /backup01 as its getting filled up quickly and can't play much on it as these are production servers. As I have no idea about how to do this, can anyone let me... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: phanidhar6039
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
bootparamd
RPC.BOOTPARAMD(8) BSD System Manager's Manual RPC.BOOTPARAMD(8)
NAME
bootparamd, rpc.bootparamd -- boot parameter server
SYNOPSIS
bootparamd [-ds] [-i interface] [-r router] [-f file]
DESCRIPTION
bootparamd is a server process that provides information to diskless clients necessary for booting. It consults the file ``/etc/bootparams''.
It should normally be started from ``/etc/rc''.
This version will allow the use of aliases on the hostname in the ``/etc/bootparams'' file. The hostname returned in response to the booting
client's whoami request will be the name that appears in the config file, not the canonical name. In this way you can keep the answer short
enough so that machines that cannot handle long hostnames won't fail during boot.
While parsing, if a line containing just ``+'' is found, and the YP subsystem is active, the YP map bootparams will be searched immediately.
OPTIONS
-d Display the debugging information. The daemon does not fork in this case.
-i interface
Specify the interface to become the default router. bootparamd picks the first IPv4 address it finds on the system by default. With
-i, you can control which interface to be used to obtain the default router address. -r overrides -i.
-s Log the debugging information with syslog(3).
-r Set the default router (a hostname or IP-address). This defaults to the machine running the server.
-f Specify the file to use as boot parameter file instead of ``/etc/bootparams''.
FILES
/etc/bootparams default configuration file
SEE ALSO
bootparams(5)
AUTHORS
Originally written by Klas Heggemann <klas@nada.kth.se>.
BUGS
You may find the syslog messages too verbose.
It's not clear if the non-canonical hack mentioned above is a good idea.
BSD
January 8, 1994 BSD