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On Nt, I know that when you go through:
START-PROGRAMS-WINDOWS NT EXPLORER, you can see the disk layout C,D,E,F,G,H,I,etc. How do you look for the disk layout on a UNIX platform
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type "df", or "df -k" for a slightly more understandable output.
each of the paths listed there are a mounted partition of a disk. if you're on a sun, the disk names will be the things that look like c0t0d0s0.
The c is for controller number
t for target number
d for disk number
s for slice (partition) number
A disk with 2 partitions might have two entries like this
c0t0d0s0 /usr -- rest info
d0t0d0s1 /usr/local -- rest of info
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What if the unix flavor is AIX, is it going to be the same layout like you just explained or slightly different?
[Edited by thedba on 11-19-2000 at 07:54 PM]
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beats me, type df and find out :) it will probablly be something similar if not exactly the same, but i really cant' say because i haven't used AIX.
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on AIX.
lsvg : list of all volume groups
lsvg <vg> : info about a volume group
lsvg -l <vg>: list of all logical volumes in a volume group
lsvg -p <vg>: list of all physical volumes in a volume group
df : list of all mounted(!) filesystems
gives following info
Filesystem device name
512-blocks total number of 512-byte blocks
Free free blocks
%Used % off blocks used
Iused number of inodes used
%Iused % off inodes used
Mounted on mount point of filesystem
or use df -k to have info in Kbytes
Hope this helps
Gert
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