Acutally I already tried that quota -v user and found that he has already exceeded his limit. Also I confirmed this on the filer as well using quota report directory.
The reason why I do not simply increase his quota, is because we do not allow users to create files beside his/her home dir. I need to find out why this is happening and fix it.
Thanks for your comment though.
Daniel Jung
System Administrator GMO inc
On 16 Nov 2001, Rune Bakken wrote:
daniel daniel@interq.or.jp writes:
I have a user who can not upload any files to his home dir using ftp and the error message he gets is "disk quota exceeded".
I checked his users quota from the filer and noticed that he is indeed over the limit of his quota.
Then you may need to increase his users quota as the filer counts all files owned by each user in each of the quota type, and hence a simple df -s will not work.
From my own quotas file:
#Quota Target type disk files rb user@/vol/users/home 8G 300K
Any files I own on or below /vol/users/home will be counted in the quota. Even if they exists outside my designated $HOME.
quota -v <user> on Solaris gives you the this output:
kavringen(root) local 501# quota -v rb Disk quotas for rb (uid 392): Filesystem usage quota limit timeleft files quota limit timeleft /home/nfs/users 2522412 8388608 8388608 50844 307200 307200
I would suspect that other OS' has similar tools.
>>.rune
-- Rune Bakken "I feel sorry for people who don't drink. System Administrator When they wake up in the morning, that's as Nextra, good as they're going to feel all day."
- Telenor Company - Frank Sinatra