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diff --git a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/quotas/chapter.sgml b/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/quotas/chapter.sgml deleted file mode 100644 index 500ae27751..0000000000 --- a/en_US.ISO_8859-1/books/handbook/quotas/chapter.sgml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,248 +0,0 @@ - <chapter id="quotas"> - <title>Disk Quotas</title> - - <para><emphasis>Contributed by &a.mpp;.<!-- <br> -->26 February - 1996</emphasis></para> - - <para>Quotas are an optional feature of the operating system that allow - you to limit the amount of disk space and/or the number of files a - user, or members of a group, may allocate on a per-file system basis. - This is used most often on timesharing systems where it is desirable - to limit the amount of resources any one user or group of users may - allocate. This will prevent one user from consuming all of the - available disk space.</para> - - - <sect1> - <title>Configuring Your System to Enable Disk Quotas</title> - - <para>Before attempting to use disk quotas it is necessary to make - sure that quotas are configured in your kernel. This is done by - adding the following line to your kernel configuration file:</para> - - <programlisting> -options QUOTA</programlisting> - - <para>The - stock <filename>GENERIC</filename> kernel does not have this enabled - by default, so you will have to configure, build and install a - custom kernel in order to use disk quotas. Please refer to the - <xref linkend="kernelconfig" remap="Configuring the FreeBSD Kernel"> - section for more information on kernel configuration.</para> - - <para>Next you will need to enable disk quotas in - <filename>/etc/sysconfig</filename>. This is done by changing the - line: - - <programlisting> -quotas=NO</programlisting> - - to: - - <programlisting> -quotas=YES</programlisting></para> - - <para>If you are running FreeBSD 2.2.2 or later, the configuration - file will be <filename>/etc/rc.conf</filename> instead and the - variable name changed to:</para> - - <programlisting> -check_quotas=YES</programlisting> - - <para>Finally you will need to edit <filename>/etc/fstab</filename> to - enable disk quotas on a per-file system basis. This is where you - can either enable user or group quotas or both for all of your file - systems.</para> - - <para>To enable per-user quotas on a file system, add the <literal>userquota</literal> option to the options field in the - <filename>/etc/fstab</filename> entry for the file system you want - to to enable quotas on. For example:</para> - - <programlisting> -/dev/sd1s2g /home ufs rw,userquota 1 2</programlisting> - - <para>Similarly, to enable group quotas, use the - <literal>groupquota</literal> option instead of the <literal>userquota</literal> keyword. To enable both user and - group quotas, change the entry as follows:</para> - - <programlisting> -/dev/sd1s2g /home ufs rw,userquota,groupquota 1 2</programlisting> - - <para>By default the quota files are stored in the root directory of - the file system with the names <filename>quota.user</filename> and - <filename>quota.group</filename> for user and group quotas - respectively. See <command>man fstab</command> for more - information. Even though that man page says that you can specify an - alternate location for the quota files, this is not recommended - since all of the various quota utilities do not seem to handle this - properly.</para> - - <para>At this point you should reboot your system with your new - kernel. <filename>/etc/rc</filename> will automatically run the - appropriate commands to create the initial quota files for all of - the quotas you enabled in <filename>/etc/fstab</filename>, so there - is no need to manually create any zero length quota files.</para> - - <para>In the normal course of operations you should not be required to - run the <command>quotacheck</command>, <command>quotaon</command>, or <command>quotaoff</command> commands manually. However, you may - want to read their man pages just to be familiar with their - operation.</para> - - </sect1> - - <sect1> - <title>Setting Quota Limits</title> - - <para>Once you have configured your system to enable quotas, verify - that they really are enabled. An easy way to do this is to run</para> - - <informalexample> - <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>quota -v</userinput></screen> - </informalexample> - - <para>You should see a one line summary of - disk usage and current quota limits for each file system that quotas - are enabled on.</para> - - <para>You are now ready to start assigning quota limits with the - <command>edquota</command> command.</para> - - <para>You have several options on how to enforce limits on the amount - of disk space a user or group may allocate, and how many files they - may create. You may limit allocations based on disk space (block - quotas) or number of files (inode quotas) or a combination of both. - Each of these limits are further broken down into two categories: - hard and soft limits.</para> - - <para>A hard limit may not be exceeded. Once a user reaches their - hard limit they may not make any further allocations on the file - system in question. For example, if the user has a hard limit of - 500 blocks on a file system and is currently using 490 blocks, the - user can only allocate an additional 10 blocks. Attempting to - allocate an additional 11 blocks will fail.</para> - - <para>Soft limits on the other hand can be exceeded for a limited - amount of time. This period of time is known as the grace period, - which is one week by default. If a user stays over his or her soft - limit longer than their grace period, the soft limit will turn into - a hard limit and no further allocations will be allowed. When the - user drops back below the soft limit, the grace period will be - reset.</para> - - <para>The following is an example of what you might see when you run - then <command>edquota</command> command. When the - <command>edquota</command> command is invoked, you are - placed into the editor specified by the <envar>EDITOR</envar> - environment variable, or in the <command>vi</command> - editor if the <envar>EDITOR</envar> variable is not set, to - allow you to edit the quota limits.</para> - - <informalexample> - <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>edquota -u test</userinput></screen> - </informalexample> - - <programlisting> -Quotas for user test: -/usr: blocks in use: 65, limits (soft = 50, hard = 75) - inodes in use: 7, limits (soft = 50, hard = 60) -/usr/var: blocks in use: 0, limits (soft = 50, hard = 75) - inodes in use: 0, limits (soft = 50, hard = 60)</programlisting> - - <para>You will - normally see two lines for each file system that has quotas enabled. - One line for the block limits, and one line for inode limits. - Simply change the value you want updated to modify the quota limit. - For example, to raise this users block limit from a soft limit of 50 - and a hard limit of 75 to a soft limit of 500 and a hard limit of - 600, change: - - <programlisting> -/usr: blocks in use: 65, limits (soft = 50, hard = 75)</programlisting> to: - - <programlisting> -/usr: blocks in use: 65, limits (soft = 500, hard = 600)</programlisting></para> - - <para>The new - quota limits will be in place when you exit the editor.</para> - - <para>Sometimes it is desirable to set quota limits on a range of - uids. This can be done by use of the <option>-p</option> option on - the <command>edquota</command> command. First, assign - the desired quota limit to a user, and then run <command>edquota -p - protouser startuid-enduid</command>. For example, if user - <username>test</username> has the desired quota limits, the - following command can be used to duplicate those quota limits for - uids 10,000 through 19,999:</para> - - <informalexample> - <screen>&prompt.root; <userinput>edquota -p test 10000-19999</userinput></screen> - </informalexample> - - <para>The ability to specify uid ranges was added to the system after - 2.1 was released. If you need this feature on a 2.1 system, you - will need to obtain a newer copy of edquota.</para> - - <para>See <command>man edquota</command> for more detailed - information.</para> - - </sect1> - - <sect1> - <title>Checking Quota Limits and Disk Usage</title> - - <para>You can use either the <command>quota</command> or - the <command>repquota</command> commands to check quota - limits and disk usage. The <command>quota</command> - command can be used to check individual user and group quotas and - disk usage. Only the super-user may examine quotas and usage for - other users, or for groups that they are not a member of. The - <command>repquota</command> command can be used to get a - summary of all quotas and disk usage for file systems with quotas - enabled.</para> - - <para>The following is some sample output from the <command>quota - -v</command> command for a user that has quota limits on two file - systems.</para> - - - <programlisting> -Disk quotas for user test (uid 1002): - Filesystem blocks quota limit grace files quota limit grace - /usr 65* 50 75 5days 7 50 60 - /usr/var 0 50 75 0 50 60</programlisting> - - <para>On the <filename>/usr</filename> file system in the above example this - user is currently 15 blocks over their soft limit of 50 blocks and - has 5 days of their grace period left. Note the asterisk <literal>*</literal> which - indicates that the user is currently over their quota limit.</para> - - <para>Normally file systems that the user is not using any disk space - on will not show up in the output from the <command>quota</command> command, even if they have a quota limit - assigned for that file system. The <option>-v</option> option will - display those file systems, such as the - <filename>/usr/var</filename> file system in the above - example.</para> - - </sect1> - - <sect1> - <title>* Quotas over NFS</title> - - <para>This section is still under development.</para> - - </sect1> - </chapter> - -<!-- - Local Variables: - mode: sgml - sgml-declaration: "../chapter.decl" - sgml-indent-data: t - sgml-omittag: nil - sgml-shorttag: nil - sgml-always-quote-attributes: t - sgml-minimize-attributes: max - sgml-parent-document: ("../handbook.sgml" "part" "chapter") - End: ---> - |