Chapter 5 Study Guide: Difference between revisions

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To view the type of the file use the following command
To view the type of the file use the following command
  “ls -l/dev/dsk”
  ls -l/dev/dsk




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'''Filesystem:'''
'''Filesystem:'''
The organization imposed on a physical storage medium that is used to manage the storage, store, retrieve, and update data on device. All filesystems have three common components: the superblock, the inode table, and the data blocks. Together they organize files and allow rapid access to and retrieval of data.
The organization imposed on a physical storage medium that is used to manage the storage, store, retrieve, and update data on device. All filesystems have three common components: the superblock, the inode table, and the data blocks. Together they organize files and allow rapid access to and retrieval of data.
Filesystems used by most linux distributions:
Extended Filesystem - ext (Linux)
Second Extended Filesystem - ext2 (Linux)
Third Extended Filesystem - ext3 (Linux, journalling)
Reiser Filesystem - reiserfs (Linux, journalling)
Amgia Fast Filesystem - affs
High Performance Filesystem - hpfs (OS/2)
IS0 9660 Filesystem - iso9660 (CD-ROM)
Minix Filesystem - Minix (Minix. first filesystem used by Linux)
FAT 16 bit - msdos (DOS, Windows)
Virtual Fat Fielsystem - vfat (DOS, Windows) Supports long filenames
Network Filesystem - NFS
Novell Filesystem - NCPFS (Novell)
System V Filesystem - sysv (System V Unix variants)
Uniform Filesystem - ufs ( BSD, Solarius, NeXTStep)
UMSDOS Filesystem - umsdos (Unix filesystem on DOS)
adfs
autofs
coda
coherent
cramfs
devpts
efs
hfs
jfs (Linux, journalling)
ntfs
proc
qnx4
romfs
smbfs
tmpfs
udf
xenix
xfs Silicon Graphics' (SGI's) IRIX


==Mounting==
==Mounting==
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  repquota
  repquota
displays quota report
displays quota report
Sources:
[http://www.linux-tutorial.info/modules.php?name=MContent&pageid=243 Supported File Systems]

Revision as of 01:50, 15 February 2012

/Dev directoy

The /dev directory contains the special device files that control access all the devices. Two main types of devices under all systems:

Character devices

Data transfers character by character to and from the device.

Block devices

Transfers chunks or blocks of information at a time by using physical memory to buffer the transfer

To view the type of the file use the following command

ls -l/dev/dsk


Major and minor numbers are associated with the device special files in the /dev directory and are used by the operating system to determine the actual driver and device to be accessed by the user-level request for the special device file.

The major number identifies the device class or group, such as a controller for several terminals. The major number is assigned, sequentially, to each device driver by the Installable Driver Tools during driver installation.

The minor number identifies a specific device, such as a single terminal. Minor numbers are assigned to special files by the driver writer in another system configuration file called the Node file.

Filesystems

Filesystem: The organization imposed on a physical storage medium that is used to manage the storage, store, retrieve, and update data on device. All filesystems have three common components: the superblock, the inode table, and the data blocks. Together they organize files and allow rapid access to and retrieval of data.

Filesystems used by most linux distributions:

Extended Filesystem - ext (Linux)

Second Extended Filesystem - ext2 (Linux)

Third Extended Filesystem - ext3 (Linux, journalling)

Reiser Filesystem - reiserfs (Linux, journalling)

Amgia Fast Filesystem - affs

High Performance Filesystem - hpfs (OS/2)

IS0 9660 Filesystem - iso9660 (CD-ROM)

Minix Filesystem - Minix (Minix. first filesystem used by Linux)

FAT 16 bit - msdos (DOS, Windows)

Virtual Fat Fielsystem - vfat (DOS, Windows) Supports long filenames

Network Filesystem - NFS

Novell Filesystem - NCPFS (Novell)

System V Filesystem - sysv (System V Unix variants)

Uniform Filesystem - ufs ( BSD, Solarius, NeXTStep)

UMSDOS Filesystem - umsdos (Unix filesystem on DOS)

adfs

autofs

coda

coherent

cramfs

devpts

efs

hfs

jfs (Linux, journalling)

ntfs

proc

qnx4

romfs

smbfs

tmpfs

udf

xenix

xfs Silicon Graphics' (SGI's) IRIX

Mounting

Mounting the process used to associate a device with a directory in the logical directory tree such that users can store data on that devices.


A mount point is a physical location or a directory in the partition used as a root filesystem.

Floppies

Used to transfer small amounts of information from computer to computer in the past Not available on all systems today Each disk must be formatted with a filesystem prior to being used to store files After formatting then you must mount it on the directory tree before it can be used

Use the mkfs (make file system) command to format the floppy disk Specify the filesystem type with a –t switch Specify a different file system name after the –t option such as the DOS FAT filesystem:

mkfs –t msdos /dev/fd0

If you don’t specify the filesystem then the default assumed is the ext2 file system: mkfs /dev/fd0

To mount a device on the directory tree use the mount command with options to specify the filesystem type to mount, the directory, and whether the /media/floppy directory is being used by any users use the fuser command with the –u option

For example:

fuser  -u /media/floppy

To unmount use the following command: unmount /media/floppy

CDs and DVDs

Can be mounted with mount and unmounted with umount Device files used by these drives are different than Floppies

Standard Configurations:

Primary master (dev/had)
Primary slave (dev/hdb)
Secondary master (dev/hdc)
Secondary slave (dev/hdd)

If you have SATA or SCSI drive then Linux uses different names

First SATA/SCSI drive (/dev/sda, /dev/scd0, /dev/sr0, and /devsg0)
Second SATA/SCSI drive ( /dev/sdb, /dev/scd1, /dev/sr1, and /dev/sg1)
Third SATA/SCSI drive ( /dev/sdc, /dev/scd2, /dev/sr2, and /dev/sg2

Symbolic Links

/dev/cdrom- 1st CD-ROM drive
/dev/cdrw 1st CD-RW drive
/dev/dvd 1st DVD-ROM drive
/dev/dvdrw 1st DVD-RW drive

ISO 9660 File System

CDs, and DVDs, use this filesystem type.

Are read-only when accessed using a Linux

You must use a disk-burning software to record to a CD, or DVD.

To mount a CD or DVD to a directory use this filesystem type and add the –r (read only) option to the command

For example:

mount –r –t iso9660 /dev/cdrom /media/cd

Not limited to CDs, and DVDs.

You can also create ISOs.

To create an ISO image from a directory of files use the mkisofs command.

For example:

mkisofs –RJ –o newimage.iso/data 
mount –o loop –t iso9660 newimage.iso /mnt

Hard Disks

3 Flavors of Hard Disks: -PATA, SATA, SCSI

PATA

Primary master (/dev/hda)

Primary slave (/dev/hdb)

Secondary master (/dev/hdc)

Secondary slave (/dev/hdd)

SATA/SCSI

/dev/sda

/dev/sdb

/dev/sdc

Etc.


Each partition can contain separate filesystems

Can be mounted to different mount point directories

Linux always requires two partitions

One for the root

One for the swap (virtual memory)

Partitions decrease the likely hood of corruption in the file system

Partitions are definitions stored in the first readable sector, known as the Master Boot Record (MBR)

Large drisks > 2TB use a GUID Partition Table (GPT) to allow for additional addressing of the sectors


Hard Disks can only contain up to four primary partitions

You can created extended partitions to overcome this

Extended partitions can then contain many more subpartitions called logical drives.

Partitions can be created specific to a certain file system

You can create partitions at installation using the graphical installation program or you can create partitions after the install using the fdisk command.

cfdisk will give you the GUI based fdisk program.

Reboot to save changes to the MBR or GPT

After reboot, you can use the mkfs, mount, and unmount commands specifying the partition device file as an argument

Swap partitions must be prepared to swap partitions and activate them for use on Linux

Use the mkswap command to prepare the swap partition

Use the swapon command to activate it


Use Logical Volume Manager (LVM) to create volumes

Volumes can contain filesystems and mounted to directories within the Linux filesystem hierarchy

More flexible than using partitions

You can use free space from any partitions on any hard disks to create the volume

Additional hard disks can easily be added to the LVM


LVM components:

Physical Volumes (PVs) Unused partitions LVM uses to store info

A Volume Group (VG) Contains one or more PVs. Represents the pool of hard disk storage space that is available to the LVM for creating logical volumes

Logical Volumes (LVs) The usable volumes created by the LVM from the storage within a VG. LVs contain a filesystem and are mounted to a directory in the hierarchy. LVs can be resized easily by the LVM to use more or less storage space.

LVM Commands

pvcreate /dev/sda4
pvdisplay
vgcreate vg00 /dev/sda4
vgdisplay
lvcreate –L 15GB –n data vg00
lvdisplay

You then work with these files you created as you would any other partition device file.


USB and Fireware based storage

Used because of their large capacity and portability. Devices which typically connect to your PC via high speed USB or Firewire cables are: flash memory drives, external hard drives, digital cameras (that contain flash memory cards), media players.

Monitoring Filesystems

Keep at least 10% of the “/” filesystem free otherwise performance can suffer.

/usr should have enough free space for the software you want installed.

/var grows with log files so delete old logs.

/usr grows with what you save there.

Easiest method to monitor free space is to use the df (Disk free) command.

df –h 

displays in an easier to read format showing in gigs or megabytes.

df only views mounted filesystems so mount them prior to using df.

If you are running out of space you can use the du command to see directory sizes.

du can be used with | more or less

du -s 

will show in a summary format

du -h

will show in gigs and megabytes like df


Filesystem corruption happens on all OS’s The most common corruption occurs when shutting down a computer and the memory gets saved to the hard drive (known as syncing). Some areas of a hard drive can go bad and not be readable by the system.

To check for errors use the fsck command (filesystem check). If you do not specify a filesystem type it will try to automatically detect one.

The filesystem must be UNmounted before you can check it


The filesystem must be UNmounted before you can check it


The filesystem must be UNmounted before you can check it


The filesystem must be UNmounted before you can check it


The filesystem must be UNmounted before you can check it


fsck –a or –y 

to automatically fix errors

fsck –C

displays a progress line

fsck –f 

to perform a full scan, if you do not it will be a quick scan

Hard Disk Quotas

If you have a lot of users you might want to limit the amount of disk space they can use Two types of quotas:

Soft Quotas: Users can go over their quota for a period of time

Hard Quotas: Cannot be passed.

quotaon

turns it on

-a for all mounted filesystems

-u or –g for users and groups


quotaoff

turns it off

-u or –g as above

-a ends all quotas

edquota

to edit a quota that exists

repquota

displays quota report

Sources: Supported File Systems