317 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
317 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
.\" $NetBSD: quotas.ms,v 1.4 2004/02/13 11:36:08 wiz Exp $
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.\"
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.\" Copyright (c) 1983, 1993
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.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
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.\"
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.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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.\" are met:
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.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
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.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
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.\" without specific prior written permission.
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.\"
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.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
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.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
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.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
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.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
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.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
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.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
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.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
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.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
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.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
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.\"
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.\" @(#)quotas.ms 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/8/93
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.\"
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.EH 'SMM:4-%''Disc Quotas in a \s-2UNIX\s+2 Environment'
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.OH 'Disc Quotas in a \s-2UNIX\s+2 Environment''SMM:4-%'
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.ND 5th July, 1983
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.TL
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Disc Quotas in a \s-2UNIX\s+2\s-3\u*\d\s0 Environment
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.FS
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* UNIX is a trademark of Bell Laboratories.
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.FE
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.AU
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Robert Elz
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.AI
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Department of Computer Science
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University of Melbourne,
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Parkville,
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Victoria,
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Australia.
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.AB
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.PP
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In most computing environments, disc space is not
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infinite.
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The disc quota system provides a mechanism
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to control usage of disc space, on an
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individual basis.
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.PP
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Quotas may be set for each individual user, on any, or
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all filesystems.
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.PP
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The quota system will warn users when they
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exceed their allotted limit, but allow some
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extra space for current work.
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Repeatedly remaining over quota at logout,
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will cause a fatal over quota condition eventually.
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.PP
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The quota system is an optional part of
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\s-2VMUNIX\s0 that may be included when the
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system is configured.
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.AE
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.NH 1
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Users' view of disc quotas
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.PP
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To most users, disc quotas will either be of no concern,
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or a fact of life that cannot be avoided.
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The
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\fIquota\fP\|(1)
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command will provide information on any disc quotas
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that may have been imposed upon a user.
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.PP
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There are two individual possible quotas that may be
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imposed, usually if one is, both will be.
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A limit can be set on the amount of space a user
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can occupy, and there may be a limit on the number
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of files (inodes) he can own.
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.PP
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.I Quota
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provides information on the quotas that have
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been set by the system administrators, in each
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of these areas, and current usage.
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.PP
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There are four numbers for each limit, the current
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usage, soft limit (quota), hard limit, and number
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of remaining login warnings.
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The soft limit is the number of 1K blocks (or files)
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that the user is expected to remain below.
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Each time the user's usage goes past this limit,
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he will be warned.
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The hard limit cannot be exceeded.
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If a user's usage reaches this number, further
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requests for space (or attempts to create a file)
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will fail with an EDQUOT error, and the first time
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this occurs, a message will be written to the user's
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terminal.
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Only one message will be output, until space occupied
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is reduced below the limit, and reaches it again,
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in order to avoid continual noise from those
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programs that ignore write errors.
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.PP
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Whenever a user logs in with a usage greater than
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his soft limit, he will be warned, and his login
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warning count decremented.
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When he logs in under quota, the counter is reset
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to its maximum value (which is a system configuration
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parameter, that is typically 3).
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If the warning count should ever reach zero (caused
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by three successive logins over quota), the
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particular limit that has been exceeded will be treated
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as if the hard limit has been reached, and no
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more resources will be allocated to the user.
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The \fBonly\fP way to reset this condition is
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to reduce usage below quota, then log in again.
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.NH 2
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Surviving when quota limit is reached
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.PP
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In most cases, the only way to recover from over
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quota conditions, is to abort whatever activity was in progress
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on the filesystem that has reached its limit, remove
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sufficient files to bring the limit back below quota,
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and retry the failed program.
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.PP
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However, if you are in the editor and a write fails
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because of an over quota situation, that is not
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a suitable course of action, as it is most likely
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that initially attempting to write the file
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will have truncated its previous contents, so should
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the editor be aborted without correctly writing the
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file not only will the recent changes be lost, but
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possibly much, or even all, of the data
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that previously existed.
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.PP
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There are several possible safe exits for a user
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caught in this situation.
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He may use the editor \fB!\fP shell escape command to
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examine his file space, and remove surplus files.
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Alternatively, using \fIcsh\fP, he may suspend the
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editor, remove some files, then resume it.
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A third possibility, is to write the file to
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some other filesystem (perhaps to a file on /tmp)
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where the user's quota has not been exceeded.
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Then after rectifying the quota situation,
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the file can be moved back to the filesystem
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it belongs on.
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.NH 1
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Administering the quota system
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.PP
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To set up and establish the disc quota system,
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there are several steps necessary to be performed
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by the system administrator.
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.PP
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First, the system must be configured to include
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the disc quota sub-system.
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This is done by including the line:
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.DS
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options QUOTA
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.DE
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in the system configuration file, then running
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\fIconfig\fP\|(8)
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followed by a system configuration\s-3\u*\d\s0.
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.FS
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* See also the document ``Building 4.2BSD UNIX Systems with Config''.
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.FE
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.PP
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Second, a decision as to what filesystems need to have
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quotas applied needs to be made.
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Usually, only filesystems that house users' home directories,
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or other user files, will need to be subjected to
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the quota system, though it may also prove useful to
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also include \fB/usr\fR.
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If possible, \fB/tmp\fP should usually be free of quotas.
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.PP
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Having decided on which filesystems quotas need to be
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set upon, the administrator should then allocate the
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available space amongst the competing needs. How this
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should be done is (way) beyond the scope of this document.
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.PP
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Then, the
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\fIedquota\fP\|(8)
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command can be used to actually set the limits desired upon
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each user. Where a number of users are to be given the
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same quotas (a common occurrence) the \fB\-p\fP switch
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to edquota will allow this to be easily accomplished.
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.PP
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Once the quotas are set, ready to operate, the system
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must be informed to enforce quotas on the desired filesystems.
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This is accomplished with the
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\fIquotaon\fP\|(8)
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command.
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.I Quotaon
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will either enable quotas for a particular filesystem, or
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with the \fB\-a\fP switch, will enable quotas for each
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filesystem indicated in \fB/etc/fstab\fP as using quotas.
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See
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\fIfstab\fP\|(5)
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for details.
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Most sites using the quota system, will include the
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line
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.DS C
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/etc/quotaon -a
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.DE
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in \fB/etc/rc.local\fP.
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.PP
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Should quotas need to be disabled, the
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\fIquotaoff\fP(8)
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command will do that, however, should the filesystem be
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about to be dismounted, the
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\fIumount\fP\|(8)
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command will disable quotas immediately before the
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filesystem is unmounted.
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This is actually an effect of the
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\fIumount\fP\|(2)
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system call, and it guarantees that the quota system
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will not be disabled if the umount would fail
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because the filesystem is not idle.
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.PP
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Periodically (certainly after each reboot, and when quotas
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are first enabled for a filesystem), the records retained
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in the quota file should be checked for consistency with
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the actual number of blocks and files allocated to
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the user.
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The
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\fIquotacheck\fP\|(8)
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command can be used to accomplish this.
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It is not necessary to dismount the filesystem, or disable
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the quota system to run this command, though on
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active filesystems inaccurate results may occur.
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This does no real harm in most cases, another run of
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.I quotacheck
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when the filesystem is idle will certainly correct any inaccuracy.
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.PP
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The super-user may use the
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\fIquota\fP\|(1)
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command to examine the usage and quotas of any user, and
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the
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\fIrepquota\fP\|(8)
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command may be used to check the usages and limits for
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all users on a filesystem.
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.NH 1
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Some implementation detail.
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.PP
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Disc quota usage and information is stored in a file on the
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filesystem that the quotas are to be applied to.
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Conventionally, this file is \fBquotas\fR in the root of
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the filesystem.
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While this name is not known to the system in any way,
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several of the user level utilities "know" it, and
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choosing any other name would not be wise.
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.PP
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The data in the file comprises an array of structures, indexed
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by uid, one structure for each user on the system (whether
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the user has a quota on this filesystem or not).
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If the uid space is sparse, then the file may have holes
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in it, which would be lost by copying, so it is best to
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avoid this.
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.PP
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The system is informed of the existence of the quota
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file by the
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\fIsetquota\fP\|(2)
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system call.
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It then reads the quota entries for each user currently
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active, then for any files open owned by users who
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are not currently active.
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Each subsequent open of a file on the filesystem, will
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be accompanied by a pairing with its quota information.
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In most cases this information will be retained in core,
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either because the user who owns the file is running some
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process, because other files are open owned by the same
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user, or because some file (perhaps this one) was recently
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accessed.
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In memory, the quota information is kept hashed by user-id
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and filesystem, and retained in an LRU chain so recently
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released data can be easily reclaimed.
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Information about those users whose last process has
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recently terminated is also retained in this way.
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.PP
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Each time a block is accessed or released, and each time an inode
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is allocated or freed, the quota system gets told
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about it, and in the case of allocations, gets the
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opportunity to object.
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.PP
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Measurements have shown
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that the quota code uses a very small percentage of the system
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CPU time consumed in writing a new block to disc.
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.NH 1
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Acknowledgments
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.PP
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The current disc quota system is loosely based upon a very
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early scheme implemented at the University of New South
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Wales, and Sydney University in the mid 70's. That system
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implemented a single combined limit for both files and blocks
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on all filesystems.
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.PP
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A later system was implemented at the University of Melbourne
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by the author, but was not kept highly accurately, eg:
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chown's (etc) did not affect quotas, nor did i/o to a file
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other than one owned by the instigator.
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.PP
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The current system has been running (with only minor modifications)
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since January 82 at Melbourne.
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It is actually just a small part of a much broader resource
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control scheme, which is capable of controlling almost
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anything that is usually uncontrolled in unix. The rest
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of this is, as yet, still in a state where it is far too
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subject to change to be considered for distribution.
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.PP
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For the 4.2BSD release, much work has been done to clean
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up and sanely incorporate the quota code by Sam Leffler and
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Kirk McKusick at The University of California at Berkeley.
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