Looking at the default case in a new file system/fileset, if you did an 
“mmrepquota” you’d see everyone have a default quota of zero. Meaning – any 
time you set a user/fileset/group quota back to zero, you are removing any 
trace of the previous quota. On you your specific question - yes, one by one is 
it, I’m not aware of any other way to do it.

Hard quota set, no soft quota: no grace period
Hard Soft quota set and equal: no grace period
Hard quota set or unset, soft quota set: grace period

The default behavior is no grace period unless soft quota is set, maybe that’s 
why it’s no displayed?


Bob Oesterlin
Sr Principal Storage Engineer, Nuance

From: <[email protected]> on behalf of Keith Ball 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: gpfsug main discussion list <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, December 9, 2017 at 3:50 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: [EXTERNAL] Re: [gpfsug-discuss] Working with per-fileset quotas

I meant more specifically, remove any indication that quotas have been set, for 
anyone (or everyone). That way, I could have a script to clean out old quota 
definitions, then set both default and explicit quotas, without any old 
settings lurking around. Is there a way to get rid of (e.g. zero out) all 
existing explicit PER-FILESET quota definitions, and start over (without having 
to look at mmrepquota and zero them out one by one)?


So I see your point about soft=lard limit => no grace period. I guess what's 
odd is that I see any indication that the grace period is not "none"; what 
grace period would be assigned to a per-fileset quota if I cannot even view or 
set it?


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