/etc/passwd | grep 1013
> #
>
> # cat /etc/group | grep 1013
> #
>
> Where are these ID'd users coming from?
>
> Thanks!
>
>
>
It took me a while to figure out
Once I realized that the way quotas work is not to limit the aggregate size
of the files in a user
# repquota -sC /home
hollandj --227M 0K 0K 3258 0 0
#1013 --112K 48829M 49805M 13 0 0
#1015 --779M 48829M 49805M 19049 0 0
cds04a-- 41424M 0K 0K 32221 0 0
mxr02d-- 20966M
I'm authenticating users from Active Directory using sssd (realmd). Is
there a way I can set a default quota value so that when a new user logs in
and his /home directory is created, it is created with quotas in place?
Thanks!
--
Kent West<")))><
Westin
Newish to quotas; my google-fu is failing me on this question:
What's the difference between quotatool, edquota, and setquota, and why
would I want to use one over the other?
Thanks!
--
Kent West<")))><
Westing Peacefully - http://kentwest.blogspot.com
tengo instalado un servidor debian 7 con ldap postfix y dovecot como
podria aplicar las cuotas a cada buzon Ayuda!
gracias
Dear Camelón,
> From: Camaleón
> Date: Sat, 10 Mar 2012 15:54:37 + (UTC)
>
> (...)
> > But then, I got this error (1):
> > $quotacheck -avugm -f
> > quotacheck: WARNING - Quotafile //aquota.group was probably truncated.
>
> (...)
> As per:
> /usr/share/doc/quota/README.Debian
> You have to
On Fri, 09 Mar 2012 19:32:09 -0300, rcb wrote:
(...)
> But then, I got this error (1):
> $quotacheck -avugm -f
> quotacheck: WARNING - Quotafile //aquota.group was probably truncated.
> Cannot save quota settings... quotacheck: Scanning
> /dev/disk/by-uuid/3aa1b641-608f [/]
(...)
As per:
/usr
Quotas for NFS shares are enforced on the server end. You would use
the usrquota and grpquota flags in fstab *on the server* for the
filesystem it's exporting. Hopefully your NAS appliance supports
quotas and offers a way to turn them on in whatever configuration
interface it has.
Ah
On Oct 3, 2007, at 12:42 PM, Daniel Mahoney wrote:
I've got a Debian Sarge machine that is mounting it's user
directories via
NFS from a NAS appliance. Id' really like to get quotas running but
I'm
not having a lot of luck.
I've tried adding "quota" an
MRH wrote:
Dnia 03/10/07 20:42,Daniel Mahoney napisał:
I've got a Debian Sarge machine that is mounting it's user
directories via
NFS from a NAS appliance. Id' really like to get quotas running but I'm
not having a lot of luck.
I've tried adding "quota" an
Dnia 03/10/07 20:42,Daniel Mahoney napisał:
I've got a Debian Sarge machine that is mounting it's user directories via
NFS from a NAS appliance. Id' really like to get quotas running but I'm
not having a lot of luck.
I've tried adding "quota" and "
I've got a Debian Sarge machine that is mounting it's user directories via
NFS from a NAS appliance. Id' really like to get quotas running but I'm
not having a lot of luck.
I've tried adding "quota" and "usrquota" to the fstab flags for the
NFS-m
Not related to debian-security. Forwarded to debian-user. Removed french
part that is not appropriate to either debian-security nor debian-user.
Please take care to send messages to the appropriate mailing lists!
Thanks, Johannes
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Good Morning,
> I would like give the pe
Hi all,
I am running multiple servers, each with various reiserFS partitions.
On the fileserver (home dirs amongst others) I wish to enable quotas. The
last time I looked, quota support for the 2.4 kernel was not available for
Reiser partitions - is this still the case?
Cheers,
Pete.
--
To
On 5/17/06, Hex Star <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, I have a server running Suse 10, stock kernel 2.6.13-15-smp and
cPanel version 10.8.2-RELEASE 83 , I can't seem to get quotas to work.
I've tried enabling quotas in whm and doing /scripts/fixquotas but it
always returns this error
Hex Star wrote:
Hi, I have a server running Suse 10, stock kernel 2.6.13-15-smp and
cPanel version 10.8.2-RELEASE 83 , I can't seem to get quotas to work.
I've tried enabling quotas in whm and doing /scripts/fixquotas but it
always returns this error: Old group file(s) not fo
Hi, I have a server running Suse 10, stock kernel 2.6.13-15-smp and
cPanel version 10.8.2-RELEASE 83 , I can't seem to get quotas to work.
I've tried enabling quotas in whm and doing /scripts/fixquotas but it
always returns this error: Old group file(s) not found, won't subtract
usa
On Sat, Dec 10, 2005 at 11:26:04PM -, Pete Clarke wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am running Debian sarge on i386 with some Reiserfs partitions.
> Is it still the case that Reiserfs volumes don't support quotas?
>From the CONFIG_QUOTA help:
Currently, it works for the ext2, ext
Hi all,
I am running Debian sarge on i386 with some Reiserfs partitions.
Is it still the case that Reiserfs volumes don't support quotas?
Cheers
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Does anyone know how to get dovecot working with quotas?
i have all the data in a Mysql table (including the user's quota).
Ben
So, I need to enable quotas for all users who have accounts in the
/export partition (yes, I have used Solaris before and am kinda used to
some of their way of doing things). Googling around, I found the page
http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/notes/debian/quotas.html. In it, the author
mentioned
On 5/6/05, Lee Braiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Friday 06 May 2005 10:33, Siju George wrote:
>
> > ext2? ext3? ReiserFS? JFS?
>
> Personally, I prefer XFS. ReiserFS is a good choice too, but I still have
> stability concerns regarding Reiser.
>
one more quick question please :-)
if I r
Dear Lee,
sorry for the late reply :-(
there was no office for two days.
On 5/6/05, Lee Braiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Friday 06 May 2005 12:15, Siju George wrote:
> > actually I don't run a GUI on this machine because it is a server that
> > hosts some PHP website development.
>
> Ahh
On Friday 06 May 2005 12:15, Siju George wrote:
> actually I don't run a GUI on this machine because it is a server that
> hosts some PHP website development.
Ahh. What are you actually trying to prevent, then? Accidentally deleting
your web projects?
For software projects, I'd recommend getti
Thankyou so much Lee for your detailed reply.
I appreciate them very much :-)
On 5/6/05, Lee Braiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Friday 06 May 2005 10:33, Siju George wrote:
>
> Undeleting files shouldn't be part of a "strategy". At best, it's a last
> resort. If it actually works, it's a
On Friday 06 May 2005 10:33, Siju George wrote:
> 1) implementing and managing disk quotas
I think most of the mainstream filesystems support this equally well. Not
sure though.
> 2) easy undeleting of files
Undeleting files shouldn't be part of a "strategy". At best
Hi all,
May I know which filesystem is best for Debian woody 3.0r5 for
1) implementing and managing disk quotas
2) easy undeleting of files
ext2? ext3? ReiserFS? JFS?
Thankyou so much
kind regards
Siju
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Running Woody with a vanilla 2.4.20 kernel + SGI XFS patch. I've used
> quotas before, but not with XFS. So maybe I'm missing something...
>
> The man pages say that to activate quotas on a root XFS filesystem,
> you simply do "quotaon -
Running Woody with a vanilla 2.4.20 kernel + SGI XFS patch. I've used
quotas before, but not with XFS. So maybe I'm missing something...
The man pages say that to activate quotas on a root XFS filesystem, you
simply do "quotaon -v /". But if I do that, I get "quotaon
Hello,
I am having troubles with quotas on my linux box. I am running the
kernel 2.4.20:
[nc21] ~ > cat /proc/version
Linux version 2.4.20 (root@nc21) (gcc version 2.95.4 20011002 (Debian
prerelease)) #1 Thu Jan 9 15:31:41 CET 2003
with quota support compiled in:
#
# File systems
#
CONFIG_QU
also sprach Daniel Fabian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.11.30.1549 +0100]:
> check their free diskspace. So is there a command for the user to find out
> how much diskspace is left?
/usr/bin/quota from the 'quota' package
--
.''`. martin f. krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: :' :proud Debian dev
Hi,
This is probably a very simple question, but I did not find a way to get
this straight: I'm building a small webhosting environment, and my users get
say 10MB of diskspace. I added quotas for these users and everything works
just fine. But the problem is that I did not find a way to le
I have a question, which really doesn't concern quotas as far as I
understand them.
Over the weekend, I needed to perform a task whereby a file was written
from an NT 4 server to a samba share on a Debian server. The file was
about 3.5 gig. At 3.2 I received an error to the effect that
Hi List,
I've been having real trouble with quotas on Woody. They are working to
a degree, I have kernel support, I have the quota files, but I have
recurring problems and the gut feeling that things just aren't quite
right and I don't trust them to work properly.
I'm
Hi Dave,
I too have recently been having quota related nightmares with Woody. It
seems that some quota tools look for old version quotas by default, while
others look at the kernel to get the version. In any case my current
work around is to provide both old and new versions of quotas for all
Howdy folks,
I'm setting up a Deb woody server and want quota support on /home just
in case we need to get serious. I have quota support in the kernel and
the following in /etc/fstab:
/dev/sda6 /home ext3defaults,data=journal,usrquota 0
2
I run #quotacheck -c /home
and get this:
I'm a newbie and need some help. I've been trying to make disk
quotas work so that the quota shows on a Samba mount instead of the disk
size. I'm using the 2.2.20 kernel, compiled with quota support, and the
quotas themselves are working. I tried Samba 2.2.3a, compiling
* Oliver Elphick [2001.12.02 16:52:04+]:
> None that I know of.
> -- syd barrett
huh? was this a mistake on your part, or are you claiming that syd
barrett said this "famous quote?" (he surely did, multiple times
probably). looks more like a leftover of my pre
On Sun, 2001-12-02 at 15:27, martin f krafft wrote:
> right, that was my understanding, but this approach is not at all
> scalable, so it's not going to work. i guess for now i really just
> have to work with a script and cron. can anyone tell me how to display
> the size of a postgres database, or
* Oliver Elphick [2001.11.30 12:32:30+]:
> It is possible to do what you want if you run a separate postmaster
> (under a separate port) for each database owner. This will require a
> separate database structure and initdb to be run in each separate
> structure. Each database owner would nee
On Mon, 2001-11-26 at 16:51, martin f krafft wrote:
> hi,
> i am hosting some users databases and i need to impose quota (not
> quotas, not quotae) on their databases. postgresql does not implement
> those, and storing the database as the user doesn't really work[1].
>
>
hi,
i am hosting some users databases and i need to impose quota (not
quotas, not quotae) on their databases. postgresql does not implement
those, and storing the database as the user doesn't really work[1].
i can't find a way to have postgres tell me the size of a database, so
there
r in question had reached their disk quota.
I'm assuming it's actually the MDA sendmail is configured to use and not
so much sendmail's problem to deal with quotas?
In this case, how can I configure the MDA to bounce messages with a fatal
error if the specific user's disk quota has been exceeded?
Andrew
If I start using quotas in the kernel, which package should i install? Quota,
quotatools or both?
Calyth
pgpkz9bDnSsNo.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Wed, Jul 18, 2001 at 11:56:50PM +0200, Martin F. Krafft wrote:
> is it possible to configure apache to log the total amount of traffic
> (in Mb) that is generated by a virtual host? how would i set that up?
Install the lire package.
Cheers,
Joost
hi guys,
is it possible to configure apache to log the total amount of traffic
(in Mb) that is generated by a virtual host? how would i set that up?
martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.)
\ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:"; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
#define emacs eig
Daniel Sand wrote:
>
> Hi Debian Folks,
>
> I have some problem with a new Fileserver on my work.
>
> Specs:
>
> PIII 800
> 256 MB Ram
> FastTrak IDE Raid Controller ( 3 HD ( 75 GB IBM ) = STRIPE ) with a
while i can't answer your question directly its best not to use the
fast trak ide raid co
skyfish kernel: DebEngFun : bReadErrorRegister()
May 2 19:27:59 skyfish kernel: FASTTRAK : Bad bm_status = 0x5
May 2 19:28:04 skyfish kernel: FASTTRAK : Bad bm_status = 0x5
May 2 19:28:04 skyfish kernel: DebEngFun : bReadErrorRegister()
---[ SNAP ]---
If I remove the quotas and reboot all running
On 01-Aug-2000 Hammurabi Mendes wrote:
> what are user quotas?
>
> can anyone help me? i couldn't find much information on the manual pages
>
user quotas are limits placed on normal users. Examples are size of home
directory, number of processes running at once, amount of memory used, etc.
what are user quotas?
can anyone help me? i couldn't find much information on the manual pages
thanks
I've enabled quota's for users, I've got one set up and I want to do a
global change so that all other users are like that account. Does
any one know the command syntax to do that?
e...
> or is it a bug?
>
> I was having some trouble getting quotas to work and after some fiddling
> I discovered the following behavior.
>
> If I have the following line in my /etc/fstab everything is fine:
>
> /dev/hda2 /ext2 defaults,errors=remount-ro,usrquota
G'day all,
recently I swapped over disks from my old system to the new one.
I need the user quotas working on one disk that was sdc1 on the old system and
is sde1 on the new one with the same quotas as were on the old sustem.
I have tried just using the old user.quota but it dosn
20, or
>they are in a higher position, this particular Linux box is pretty much
>inaccessible and useless whilst checking it's quotas.
>
>Is there any harm in making the quota checking process further down the
>line, after the likes of sendmail and apache have started, or doe
are in a higher position, this particular Linux box is pretty much
inaccessible and useless whilst checking it's quotas.
Is there any harm in making the quota checking process further down the
line, after the likes of sendmail and apache have started, or does it run at
this position
Is it possible to limit certain apps to limited amount of swap? This
morning I sit down at my machine to find that something ate all my swap
which then proceeded to crash lots of daemons and my X session. I don't
know what was the culprit but I wouldn't be supprised if it was
netscape. I could
Yeah, I read that... that isn't what I wanted becuase I'd need to make too
many protousers.. I want to manually specify the limits.
-Paul
On Mon, 17 Aug 1998, Nathan E Norman wrote:
> On Sun, 16 Aug 1998, Paul Miller wrote:
>
> :
> : Quota only displays user quotas.
On Sun, 16 Aug 1998, Paul Miller wrote:
:
: Quota only displays user quotas. Edquota edits quotas, but only with a
: editor. It doesn't not accept command line arguments for soft/hard/etc.
: limits.
Wrong. RTFM `man edquota' and carefully examine the "-p" opti
Quota only displays user quotas. Edquota edits quotas, but only with a
editor. It doesn't not accept command line arguments for soft/hard/etc.
limits.
-Paul
On Sun, 16 Aug 1998, John wrote:
> m
der .oOo.
---
On Sat, 15 Aug 1998, Paul Miller wrote:
>
> I need a command line program to set user quotas. Does one exist?
>
> Thanks
> -Paul
>
Hello Paul:
I use the edquota command. Its pretty easy to use just read the man page.
You should note that quota must be turned on in the kernel and the target
file system must be mounted with quotas on -- i.e. in /etc/fstab
# /etc/fstab: static file system information
I need a command line program to set user quotas. Does one exist?
Thanks
-Paul
I know about disk quotas but can one set up printing quotas?
/--/
Daniel J. Mashao
Electrical Engineering [EMAIL PROTECTED]
University of Cape Town http
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Carlos Carvalho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I've got a filesystem of about 13GB, on a raid5 array. I'm trying to
>set a quota of about 6GB for a user, but edquota produces "random"
>values. When I use repquota or enter edquota again the values are much
>lower!
>
>Is
I've got a filesystem of about 13GB, on a raid5 array. I'm trying to
set a quota of about 6GB for a user, but edquota produces "random"
values. When I use repquota or enter edquota again the values are much
lower!
Is the quota system limited at 4GB?? What am I doing wrong?
This is with quota 1.65
The `quota' command isn't quite doing what I think it should. I've
added the appropriate lines to /etc/fstab, run `quotacheck -av', run
`quotaon -av' and `edquota' for the users who need them, but typing
`quota ' (as root) always results in the message "Di
Hello there!
Here at JD-WEB I'm using procmail as the local delivery agent within
sendmail 8.8.5 on Debian 1.3.x with quotas enabled and "in effect". I've
found that procmail won't deliver (a.k.a. will bounce) a mail if it would
put the user over soft quota.
Is
At 10:23 AM 29/07/97 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Turn quota's on for /var where the mail spools are
>(/var/spool/mail) That should do it, since each user owns their own
>mailbox.
Unfortunately this doesn't work for users who install Smail (I've only ever
installed Smail because of bug
On Tue, Jul 29, 1997 at 09:17:06AM -0400, Shawn Caron wrote:
: This is simple question but
: I have setup quotas for user home directories before, but exactly how does
: one put a quota on a user's mail spool file?
So quota /var as well, or /var/spool/mail, if you have a partition
jus
On Tue, 29 Jul 1997, Shawn Caron wrote:
>
> This is simple question but
> I have setup quotas for user home directories before, but exactly how does
> one put a quota on a user's mail spool file?
Turn quota's on for /var where the mail spools are
(/var/spool/ma
This is simple question but
I have setup quotas for user home directories before, but exactly how does
one put a quota on a user's mail spool file?
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Just FYI:
Felix Almeida writes:
> I'm using the AMD to mount the home directories by NFS on the clients.
> I've read all of documents related to quotas, but with no success...
The problem was in the way I built the amd map for poor Felix's network ;-)
The home server
o let the
> users know their disk quotas? The problem is that the quota command
> doesn't show the quota values, it only shows them when the user is logged
> on the server.
>
> I'm using the AMD to mount the home directories by NFS on the clients.
> I've read all o
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Ok. I know that. I'm starting rpc.rquotad in my netstd_misc script (on
> the server), so it is not the problem... When I mount the filesystems on
> the clients, via NFS too, directly in the fstab (not in AMD) the quotas
> are shown normaly (if I didn
On Thu, 19 Jun 1997, Lukas Nellen wrote:
> You need to run the rquotad on the server to be able to query quotas for
> NFS-mounted filesystems. I patched /etc/init.d/quota to run rpc.rquotad
> if you export filesystems and at the same time some filesystems have
> quotas. I don
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> Does anybody know how I can configure my network in order to let the
> users know their disk quotas? The problem is that the quota command
> doesn't show the quota values, it only shows them when the user is logged
> on the server.
You need to run t
Does anybody know how I can configure my network in order to let the
users know their disk quotas? The problem is that the quota command
doesn't show the quota values, it only shows them when the user is logged
on the server.
I'm using the AMD to mount the home directories by
creen
winspace >
winspace >1. compile kernel with quotas enabled
winspace >2. create empty file /quota.user
winspace >3. create empty file /quota.group
winspace >4. edit /etc/mtab and have something similar for each disk
winspace > /dev/hda2 / ext2 rw,usrquota,grpquota 0 1
winspa
On Wed, 1 Jan 1997, Tim Sailer wrote:
thanks, i know this:) i just wanted to know how you actually edit them,
for instance, in solaris you type edquta user, then this screens appears
fs /home (soft = 0 hard = 0)
then you type in the bytes you want to set the limit to. But debian gives
you what
In your email to me, Fundamental, you wrote:
>
>
> how do you edit a quota in debian, when i try i get a blank editor screen
> with the words
>
> Quota for user default:
>
> what number am i supposed to put here? how do you define the hard/soft
> limit?
You have to have quota enabled in the
how do you edit a quota in debian, when i try i get a blank editor screen
with the words
Quota for user default:
what number am i supposed to put here? how do you define the hard/soft
limit?
thanks
"Silence is the language of complicity."
- Roman proverb
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On Sun, 26 May 1996, Michael Meskes wrote:
> Kevin M Bealer writes:
> > Just for reference, I had to change the fstab to have
> > "usrquota,grpquota,quota" in it for the fs. After that, edquota gave a nice
>
> All three? It should suffice to use 'u
Kevin M Bealer writes:
> Just for reference, I had to change the fstab to have
> "usrquota,grpquota,quota" in it for the fs. After that, edquota gave a nice
All three? It should suffice to use 'usrquota' if you want user quotas and
'grpquota' for group quot
On 22 May 1996, Hugo HAAS wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I've tried to install quotas but I've got a little problem.
> When I make an 'edquota someone', I get :
>
> Quotas for user someone:
>
> and I don't know what to write after this.
>
> I'
> I've tried to install quotas but I've got a little problem.
> When I make an 'edquota someone', I get :
>
> Quotas for user someone:
>
> and I don't know what to write after this.
>
> I've found no informations in the man, or in the docs.
Hi.
I've tried to install quotas but I've got a little problem.
When I make an 'edquota someone', I get :
Quotas for user someone:
and I don't know what to write after this.
I've found no informations in the man, or in the docs. So, if someone has
managed
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