NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | USAGE | EXAMPLES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS
lockfs is used to change and report the status of file system locks. lockfs reports the lock status and unlocks the file systems that were improperly left locked by an application such as ufsdump(1M). This could occur if ufsdump(1M) is killed using kill(1).
Using lockfs to lock a file system is discouraged because this requires extensive knowledge of SunOS internals to be used effectively and correctly.
When invoked with no arguments, lockfs lists the UFS file systems that are locked. If file-system is not specified, and -a is specified, lockfs is run on all mounted, UFS type file systems.
The following options are supported. You must be super-user to use any of the following options, with the exception of -a.
Apply command to all mounted, UFS type file systems. file-system is ignored when -a is specified.
Accept a string that is passed as the comment field. The -c only takes affect when the lock is being set using the -d, -h, -n, -u, or -w options.
delete-lock (dlock) the specified file-system. dlock suspends access that could remove directory entries.
error-lock (elock) the specified file-system. elock blocks all local access to the locked file system and returns EWOULDBLOCK on all remote access. File systems are elocked by UFS on detection of internal inconsistency. They may only be unlocked after successful repair by fsck, which is usually done automatically (see mount_ufs(1M)). elocked file systems can be unmounted.
Flush all transactions out of the log and write the transactions to the master file system. This option is valid only if logging has been enabled on the file system.
Hard-lock (hlock) the specified file-system. hlock returns an error on every access to the locked file system, and cannot be unlocked. hlocked file systems can be unmounted.
Name-lock (nlock) the specified file-system. nlock suspends accesses that could change or remove existing directories entries.
Unlock (ulock) the specified file-system. ulock awakens suspended accesses.
Write-lock (wlock) the specified file-system. wlock suspends writes that would modify the file system. Access times are not kept while a file system is write-locked.
See largefile(5) for the description of the behavior of lockfs when encountering files greater than or equal to 2 Gbyte ( 231 bytes).
In the following examples, filesystem is the pathname of the mounted-on directory (mount point). Locktype is one of "write," "name," "delete," "hard," or "unlock". When enclosed in parenthesis, the lock is being set. Comment is a string set by the process that last issued a lock command.
The following example shows the lockfs output when only the -a option is specified.
example# /usr/sbin/lockfs -a
Filesystem | Locktype | Comment |
/ | unlock | |
/var | unlock |
example#
The following example shows the lockfs output when the -w option is used to write lock the /var file system and the comment string is set using the -c option. The -a option is then specified on a separate command line.
example# /usr/sbin/lockfs -w -c "lockfs: write lock example" /var example# /usr/sbin/lockfs -a |
Filesystem | Locktype | Comment |
/ | unlock | |
/var | write | lockfs: write lock example |
example#
The following example shows the lockfs output when the -u option is used to unlock the /var file system and the comment string is set using the -c option.
example# /usr/sbin/lockfs -uc "lockfs: unlock example" /var example# /usr/sbin/lockfs /var |
Filesystem | Locktype | Comment |
/var | unlock | lockfs: unlock example |
example#
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
---|---|
Availability | SUNWcsu |
You must be root to use this command.
A file is enabled for accounting or swapping, on file system.
Another process is setting the lock on file system.
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | USAGE | EXAMPLES | ATTRIBUTES | SEE ALSO | DIAGNOSTICS