NAME¶
fs_quota - Displays the quota used in the volume containing a directory or file
SYNOPSIS¶
fs quota [
-path <
dir/file path>+]
[
-help]
fs q [
-p <
dir/file path>+] [
-h]
DESCRIPTION¶
The
fs quota command displays the percent of quota consumed in the volume
that contains each specified directory or file.
To display more detailed information about the volume and the partition it
resides on, use the
fs examine and
fs listquota commands.
To set volume quota, use the
fs setquota or
fs setvol command.
CAUTIONS¶
Currently, the maximum size of a volume is 2 terabytes (2^31 bytes).
OPTIONS¶
- -path <dir/file path>
- Names each file or directory for which to display the quota
consumed in its parent volume. Partial pathnames are interpreted relative
to the current working directory, which is also the default value if this
argument is omitted.
- -help
- Prints the online help for this command. All other valid
options are ignored.
OUTPUT¶
The output reports the percent of volume quota used, in the following format:
<percent>% of quota used.
EXAMPLES¶
The following command lists the percent quota used of the volume housing the
current working directory:
% fs quota
17% of quota used.
The following command lists the percent quota used of both the volume housing
the current working directory's parent directory and the volume housing the
directory
/afs/abc.com/usr/smith:
% fs quota -path .. /afs/abc.com/usr/smith
43% of quota used.
92% of quota used.
PRIVILEGE REQUIRED¶
The issuer must have the "r" (read) permission on the ACL of the root
directory of the volume that houses the file or directory named by the
-path argument, and "l" (list) permission on the ACL of each
directory that precedes it in the pathname.
SEE ALSO¶
fs_examine(1),
fs_listquota(1),
fs_setquota(1),
fs_setvol(1)
COPYRIGHT¶
IBM Corporation 2000. <
http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.
This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was
converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ
Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.