Disk Quotas (Unix Power Tools, 3rd Edition)
15.11. Disk Quotas
No matter how much disk space you
have, you will eventually run out. One way the system administrator
can force users to clean up after themselves is to impose quotas on
disk usage. Many Unixes have quota systems available: check your
manual pages with a command like apropos quota.
If you're a user, how do quotas affect you? Sooner
or later, you may find that you're over your quota.
Quotas are maintained on a per-filesystem basis. They may be placed
on disk storage (the number of blocks) and on inodes (the number of
files). The quota system maintains the concept of
hard and soft limits. When
you exceed a soft limit, you'll get a warning
(WARNING: disk quota exceeded),
but you can continue to accumulate more storage. The warning will be
repeated whenever you log in. At some point (i.e., after some number
of sessions in which the storage stays above the soft limit), the
system loses patience and refuses to allocate any more storage.
You'll get a message like OVER
DISK QUOTA: NO MORE DISK SPACE. At this
point, you must delete files until you're again
within the soft limit. Users are never allowed to exceed their hard
limit. This design allows you to have large temporary files without
penalty, provided that they do not occupy too much disk space
long-term.
There may also be a quota on the number of files (i.e., inodes) that
you can own per filesystem. It works exactly the same way;
you'll get a warning when you exceed the soft limit;
if you don't delete some files, the system will
eventually refuse to create new files.
The
quota command shows a user's
quota on each filesystem where quotas have been set. With no option,
it displays a line for each system where you're over
quota. The -v option shows a line for each system
where you have a quota. The output can be a bit confusing on systems
with the automounter running, since it mounts things dynamically and
uses symlinks to make things appear where you expect them, so the
filesystem names may not match the directory names
you're accustomed to:
$ quota
Over disk quota on /home/jpeek, remove 228K within 4.0 days
Over file quota on /home/jpeek, remove 13 files within 4.5 days
$ quota -v
Filesystem usage quota limit timeleft files quota limit timeleft
/export/users 0 8000 9000 0 600 750
/export/home9 8228 8000 9000 4.0 days 613 600 750 4.5 days
In this case, the automounter has clearly mounted my home directory
on /export/home9, since that shows the same
information that quota showed me in the first
command.
-- ML and JP
15.10. Save Space in Executable Files with stripIV. Basic Editing
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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