10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Solaris 8
running on a Sparcstation 5 (Aurora) with 170MHz processor and 256MB ram
This is AFTER doing fsck and reboot.
820030k vs 385252k
All other files in /usr/asm not in /usr/asm/sys or /usr/asm/data amount to 43k. The /usr/asm/lost+found is 8k. somehow df and other applications... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lcoreyl
3 Replies
2. AIX
Hello
Can I just remove/delete flile ?
rw-r--r-- 1 root system 2385088512 Jun 30 21:25 /dev/null 2>&1
size of this flile is 2274.75 m and fill up my filesystem:
Filesystem MB blocks Used Free %Used Mounted on
/dev/hd4 2560.00 2558.59 1.41 100% / (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: primo102
10 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hi,
inode size reached its 100% in /var
Due to this i'am getting the error No space left on device
my crond process is stopped and when i want to restart it
it is showing the below error
Starting crond: crond: can't open or create /var/run/crond.pid: No space left on device
df -i o/p
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mohamed Thamim
3 Replies
4. Shell Programming and Scripting
I have some files in a directory with two different extensions which get created everyday. Can you please help me out in getting the average file size for both these extensions and checking it with the last two file sizes of the same file extension ?
To be more clear..
Lets say I have 10 files... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kiran1112
1 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
I am having an issue adding the -size test to my find command.
I am trying to find all files smaller than 250mb, that are not in .snapsnot or man directories.
What i started with
find . -xdev -type d \( -name man -o -name .snapshot \) -prune -o -type f
What I have tried..unsuccessfully... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: nitrobass24
4 Replies
6. Programming
Hi guys.
1. how much is the size of pipe?(i mean the buffer size)
2. is this size different in various UNIX derivations?
3. what happens if we write to a full pipe? does it block until get some free space(the other side receive data) or returns an error?
3. FIFO s are physical files on the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: majid.merkava
2 Replies
7. Solaris
Can anyone know what is the size of an inode in Solaris 10 :D? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: naag20
5 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi I am trying to find files over a size given by the user.
this is what I have so far
echo "Enter a pathname to check (example = /home/jsk1gcc/testwork): "
read input
echo "Enter a the size (examples = 100k, 10M, 1G): "
read size
find $input -size +$size
echo
echo "Hit the Enter... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: AngelFlesh
2 Replies
9. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
I want to setup dual monitor for the Dell Optiplex Gx520 computer.
The motherboard has an Intel Corporation 82915G Integrated Graphics
Controller.
Then I add an ATI Rage 128 video card.
The dual monitor work on Windows 2000 with the Intel chip as the
primary screen and the ATI chip... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: TsanChung
0 Replies
10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
Thanks to Merlin & Djtrippin for comments in another thread.
Does anyone know of any issues with harddrive size and Mandrake 9.0? I have installed Mandrake (like a dream) on a 10gb drive but it refuses to go beyond the partition check on my 80gb unit. The 80 is new and I have... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: onestepto
5 Replies
clri(1M) clri(1M)
NAME
clri - clear inode
SYNOPSIS
special i-number ...
DESCRIPTION
The command clears the inode i-number by filling it with zeros. special must be a special file name referring to a device containing a
file system. For proper results, special should not be mounted (see WARNINGS below). After is executed, all blocks in the affected file
show up as "missing" in an of special (see fsck(1M)). This command should only be used in emergencies.
Read and write permission is required on the specified special device. The inode becomes allocatable.
WARNINGS
The primary purpose of this command is to remove a file that for some reason does not appear in any directory. If it is used to clear an
inode that does appear in a directory, care should be taken to locate the entry and remove it. Otherwise, when the inode is reallocated to
some new file, the old entry in the directory will still point to that file. At that point, removing the old entry destroys the new file,
causing the new entry to point to an unallocated inode, so the whole cycle is likely to be repeated again.
If the file system is mounted, is likely to be ineffective.
DEPENDENCIES
operates only on file systems of type
SEE ALSO
fsck(1M), fsdb(1M), ncheck(1M).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
clri: SVID2, SVID3
clri(1M)