Drew Henderson wrote: > As a followup, you can also look at the /etc/mnttab file for > a list of all the filesystems mounted.
Just type 'mount' on its own to see a list of the mounted filesystems. As Drew suggests, most likely the U3 filesystem is not mounted and you are simply writing to files in the U3 directory on the root filesystem. To be sure, shell out, cd to /U3 and then do a 'df -k .'. If you see information on the root filesystem then that is where you are. Badness. Worseness of course is that when you do mount the U3 filesystem, all the files you have recently created and updated on /U3 will be inaccessible and effectively 'disappear'. You may have to mount U3 somewhere else temporarily while you try to reconstruct what you think ought to be on it. Cheers, Ken > > Try "bdf" under HP-UX. If it (or "df") is not reporting it > mounted, > > then it is likely not. A partition is mounted under a > directory path > > (I assume, in this case, /U3). That directory exists even if a > > partition is not mounted on it, so you are likely writing to a > > directory on the root filesystem. > > > > HTH > > > > Drew > > > > Will wrote: > > > >> We are using HP-UX and Universe 9.6 release. We have > disks mounted > >> on U1, U2, U3, U4. > >> When we shell-out of Universe to Unix and give a df -P > command we do > >> not get a report on U3. > >> However, we can create a file on U3. Does anyone know why the df > >> command does not report the usage? ------- u2-users mailing list u2-users@listserver.u2ug.org To unsubscribe please visit http://listserver.u2ug.org/