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ocfs2_hb_ctl(8) [debian man page]

ocfs2_hb_ctl(8) 						OCFS2 Manual Pages						   ocfs2_hb_ctl(8)

NAME
ocfs2_hb_ctl - Starts and stops the OCFS2 heartbeat on a given device. SYNOPSIS
ocfs2_hb_ctl -S -d device service ocfs2_hb_ctl -S -u uuid service ocfs2_hb_ctl -K -d device service ocfs2_hb_ctl -K -u uuid service ocfs2_hb_ctl -I -d device ocfs2_hb_ctl -I -u uuid ocfs2_hb_ctl -P -d device [-n io_priority] ocfs2_hb_ctl -P -u uuid [-n io_priority] ocfs2_hb_ctl -h DESCRIPTION
ocfs2_hb_ctl starts and stops the heartbeat on a OCFS2 device. Users are strongly urged not to use this tool directly. It is automatically invoked by mount.ocfs2 and other tools that require heartbeat notifications. The tools accepts devices to be specified by its name or its uuid. Service denotes the application that is requesting the heartbeat notifi- cation. OPTIONS
-S Starts the heartbeat. -K Stops the heartbeat. -I Prints the heartbeat reference counts for that heartbeat region. -d Specify region by device name. -u Specify region by device uuid. -n Adjust IO priority for the heartbeat thread. This option calls the ionice tool to set its IO scheduling class to realtime with scheduling class data as provided. This option is usable only with the O2CB cluster stack. -h Displays help and exit. SEE ALSO
mkfs.ocfs2(8) fsck.ocfs2(8) tunefs.ocfs2(8) mounted.ocfs2(8) ocfs2console(8) debugfs.ocfs2(8) AUTHORS
Oracle Corporation COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2004, 2010 Oracle. All rights reserved. Version 1.6.4 September 2010 ocfs2_hb_ctl(8)

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tunefs.ocfs2(8) 						OCFS2 Manual Pages						   tunefs.ocfs2(8)

NAME
tunefs.ocfs2 - Change OCFS2 file system parameters. SYNOPSIS
tunefs.ocfs2 [--cloned-volume[=new-label] [--fs-features=list-of-features] [-J journal-options] [-L volume-label] [-N number-of-node-slots] [-Q query-format] [-ipqnSUvVy] [--backup-super] [--list-sparse] device [blocks-count] DESCRIPTION
tunefs.ocfs2 is used to adjust OCFS2 file system parameters on disk. The tool expects the cluster to be online as it needs to take the appropriate cluster locks to write safely to disk. OPTIONS
--cloned-volume[=new-label] Change the volume UUID (auto-generated) and the label, if provided, of a cloned OCFS2 volume. This option does not perform volume cloning. It only changes the UUID and label on a cloned volume so that it can be mounted on the node that has the original volume mounted. --fs-features=[no]sparse... Turn specific file system features on or off. tunefs.ocfs2 will attempt to enable or disable the feature list provided. To enable a feature, include it in the list. To disable a feature, prepend no to the name. For a list of feature names, see the man page for mkfs.ocfs2. -J, --journal-options options Modify the journal using options specified on the command-line. Journal options are comma separated, and may take an argument using the equals ('=') sign. For a list of possible options, see the man page for mkfs.ocfs2. -L, --label volume-label Change the volume label of the file system. Limit the label to under 64 bytes. -N, --node-slots number-of-node-slots Valid number ranges from 1 to 255. This number specifies the maximum number of nodes that can concurrently mount the partition. Use this to increase or decrease the number of node slots. One reason to decrease could be to release the space consumed by the journals for those slots. -S, --volume-size Grow the size of the OCFS2 file system. If blocks-count is not specified, tunefs.ocfs2 extends the volume to the current size of the device. -Q, --query query-format Query the file system for its attributes like block size, label, etc. Query formats are modified versions of the standard printf(3) formatting. The format is made up of static strings (which may include standard C character escapes for newlines, tabs, and other special characters) and printf(3) type formatters. The list of type specifiers is as follows: B Block size in bytes T Cluster size in bytes N Number of node slots R Root directory block number Y System directory block number P First cluster group block number V Volume label U Volume uuid M Compat flags H Incompat flags O RO Compat flags -q, --quiet Quiet mode. -U, --uuid-reset[=new-uuid] Set the volume UUID for the file system. If not provided, will auto generate a new UUID. The format of the provided UUID should be 178BDC83D50241EF94EB474A677D498B or 178BDC83-D502-41EF-94EB-474A677D498B. -v, --verbose Verbose mode. -V, --version Show version and exit. -y, --yes Always answer Yes in interactive command line. -n, --no Always answer No in interactive command line. --backup-super Backs up the superblock to fixed offsets (1G, 4G, 16G, 64G, 256G and 1T) on disk. This option is useful for users to backup the superblock on volumes that the user either explicitly disallowed while formatting, or, used a version of mkfs.ocfs2 (1.2.2 or older) that did not provide this facility. --list-sparse Lists the files having holes. This option is useful when disabling the sparse feature. --update-cluster-stack Updating on-disk cluster information to match the running cluster. blocks-count During resize, tunefs.ocfs2 automatically determines the size of the given device and grows the file system such that it uses all of the available space on the device. This optional argument specifies that the file system should be extended to consume only the given number of file system blocks on the device. EXAMPLES
[root@node1 ~]# tunefs.ocfs2 -Q "UUID = %U NumSlots = %N " /dev/sda1 UUID = CBB8D5E0C169497C8B52A0FD555C7A3E NumSlots = 4 SEE ALSO
mkfs.ocfs2(8) fsck.ocfs2(8) debugfs.ocfs2(8) mounted.ocfs2(8) ocfs2console(8) o2cb(7) AUTHORS
Oracle Corporation COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2004, 2010 Oracle. All rights reserved. Version 1.6.4 September 2010 tunefs.ocfs2(8)
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