Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users HPUX : identify NFS mountpoint Post 89894 by Perderabo on Wednesday 16th of November 2005 04:28:39 PM
Old 11-16-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by jim mcnamara
Thank you.

How would you interpret this?
Umm, I would interpret it as having nothing at all to do with what I said. I cannot see what command generated that output. My suggestion was to produce two lines of output, one from a directory and a second from that directory's parent. I seem to be counting three lines of output and I do not believe that I see a parent child relationship between any two of the three lines. And more stuff was removed?? Two lines is all you should get! A mount point is in a different filesystem than it's parent. Comparing the difference between a directory and its parent is the key. Again, cd to some-directory, then do:
df -n . ; df -n ..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need Script to Use CPUs on a HPUX server to simulate Workload Manager on HPUX.

I am running HPUX and using WLM (workload manager). I want to write a script to fork CPUs to basically take CPUs from other servers to show that the communication is working and CPU licensing is working. Basically, I want to build a script that will use up CPU on a server. Any ideas? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: cpolikowsky
2 Replies

2. HP-UX

pwage-hpux-T for Trusted HPUX servers

I'm sharing this in case anybody needs it. Modified from the original solaris pwage script. This modified hpux script will check /etc/password file on hpux trusted systems search /tcb and grep the required u_succhg field. Calculate days to expiry and notify users via email. original solaris... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sparcguy
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Get mountpoint from filename

Dear Guru's Given a full filename /a/b/c/d/file.txt how do i determine what part is the mount point ( say /a/b). Cheers, Karel (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: karelb
6 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Testing NAS /mountpoint accessible

Hello. What's the best way to ensure that a NFS filesystem mounted from a disk-cabine (NAS) is accessible? My proposal: 1. ping to the ip of the cabine 2. verify filesystem is mounted 3. touch a file inside the /mountpoint Any other suggestions? Thank you! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: asanchez
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Filesystem and partition, mountpoint

Hello All, I am new to System/plat-form administration work. Right now I am facing some issues while creating the filesystem and mounpoint. I am using Linux 6.0 SuSE 11. Last time I was used one command to partition the given space along with filesystem in SuSE 9 and it was done in GUI mode but... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: nvkuriseti
0 Replies

6. Solaris

Mountpoint 100% but no data inside

One of our mountpoint shows 100% but we have less data on that mountpoint. Pls help me to find which data/process holds the space. bash-3.00$ cd /oracle/server_software/oracle10 bash-3.00$ du -sh * 0K admin 260M app 0K flash_recovery_area 0K lost+found 0K oradata ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rock123
6 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Unable to format new mountpoint

Can some one help me i try to mkfs new mountpoint from storageIBM but give some problem # mkfs -t ext3 /dev/sdd1 mke2fs 1.39 (29-May-2006) /dev/sdd1 is apparently in use by the system; will not make a filesystem here! my os is redhat 5.3 using fdisk # fdisk -l Disk /dev/sda: 298.9... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vickyid04
4 Replies

8. AIX

Space not getting released on the mountpoint

root@atldc-oragrid-ux01:/oragrid_01> du -sg * 0.58 11gR2gridBase 47.31 Grid_11203 4.17 app 0.00 lost+found 0.01 oraInventory root@atldc-oragrid-ux01:/oragrid_01> cd Grid_11203 root@atldc-oragrid-ux01:/oragrid_01/Grid_11203> du -sg *|sort 0.00 JRE 0.00 OPatch_old 0.00 ... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: Vishal_dba
11 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Mountpoint monitoring script

Hi, I am new to shell scripting. I prepared a very simple script to monitor mount points but not geting desired output. df -h|awk -F' ' '{ if ($5 >= 80) print "CRITICAL\n" $NF " mount point has reached " $5;}'|sed -n '3,$p' When I run above script in Sun solaris box it is executing... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: sv0081493
8 Replies

10. HP-UX

HPUX 11.11 NFS client hang

Hi. I'm having problems with my HP C8000 and 11.11 (ifs client needs to be restarted every week), trying to get it worked out. When I searched the web it seems, I require the following patches: PHKL_41041, PHKL_43823, PHKL_43577 Is there anyway to get hold of these packages? Many thanks... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: plantage
2 Replies
SoTranSender(3IV)()													       SoTranSender(3IV)()

NAME
SoTranSender -- sends database changes for transcription INHERITS FROM
SoTranSender SYNOPSIS
#include <Inventor/misc/SoTranscribe.h> Methods from class SoTranSender: SoTranSender(SoOutput *output) ~SoTranSender() SoOutput * getOutput() const void insert(SoNode *node) void insert(SoNode *node, SoNode *parent, int n) void remove(SoNode *parent, int n) void replace(SoNode *parent, int n, SoNode *newNode) void modify(SoNode *node) void prepareToSend() DESCRIPTION
This class is used for transcribing Inventor data. Transcription is the process of packaging changes to a database and sending them over a "wire" to another database. The SoTranSender class is used on the sending side of transcription. It packages up changes to a Inventor database into a file or memory area defined by an SoOutput instance. It supports a limited set of changes to a database; each change is stored as a command in the tran- scription area. The SoTranReceiver class can be used at the other end to interpret the transcribed commands. METHODS
SoTranSender(SoOutput *output) The constructor takes a pointer to an SoOutput instance that determines what the transcription area is (file or memory). ~SoTranSender() Destructor. SoOutput * getOutput() const Returns pointer to current SoOutput instance. void insert(SoNode *node) Adds an INSERT command to the transcription area. The given node will be added as the last child of the root node on the receiving end. void insert(SoNode *node, SoNode *parent, int n) Adds an INSERT command to the transcription area. The given node will be added as the nth child of the given parent node on the receiv- ing end. A NULL parent node causes the node to be added to the receiving end's root node. void remove(SoNode *parent, int n) Adds a REMOVE command to the transcription area. The nth child of the given (non-NULL) parent node on the receiving end will be removed. void replace(SoNode *parent, int n, SoNode *newNode) Adds a REPLACE command to the transcription area. The nth child of the given (non-NULL) parent node on the receiving end will be replaced with newNode. void modify(SoNode *node) Adds a MODIFY command to the transcription area. Updates the field data for the given node to the new contents. Note that this changes only field data; children of groups are not affected, nor is any non-field instance data. void prepareToSend() Prepares a SoTranSender instance for transcription, making sure the transcription area is complete and all packaged to go. This must be called before the transcription can be performed. SEE ALSO
SoOutput, SoTranReceiver SoTranSender(3IV)()
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:17 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy