Thanks, I briefly checked it out and it looks like it will give me the volume/mountpoint list.
On Tue, Sep 15, 2015 at 4:12 PM, Michael Meffie <[email protected]> wrote: > >> See above. The RHEL6/Ubuntu result is likely to be the better one. >> >> In any case, find and AFS have never been friends and probably can't be. >> >> OpenAFS releases since 1.6.10 include the volscan(8) utility. It will not be >> quite as trivial to use for your purposes since you need to run it on volumes >> and stitch paths as seen by clients together yourself, but for just that >> reason results will be meaningful - for example in the presence of circular >> mounts. And it's much more efficient too. > > A small perl script called 'afs-vol-paths' is available in the openafs-contrib > afs-tools repo on github which will process the output of volscan from each > server to generate full paths. It will detect cycles too. The repo is > located at: > > https://github.com/openafs-contrib/afs-tools > > and the file is under the admin directory. > > Thanks, > Mike > > -- > Michael Meffie <[email protected]> -- John W. Sopko Jr. University of North Carolina Computer Science Dept CB 3175 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 Fred Brooks Building; Room 140 Computer Services email: sopko AT cs.unc.edu phone: 919-590-6144 _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
