Manpages

NAME

vos_create - Creates a read/write volume and associated VLDB entry

SYNOPSIS

vos create -server <machine name>
-partition 
<partition name>
-name 
<volume name>
[-maxquota <initial quota ( KB )>]
[-id <volume id number>]
[-roid < RO  volume id number>]
[-cell <cell name>]
[-noauth] [-localauth] [-verbose]
[-encrypt] [-noresolve]
[-config <config directory>]
[-help]

vos cr -s <machine name> -p <partition name>
-na 
<volume name> [-m <initial quota>]
[-i <volume id number>]
[-r < RO  volume id number>]
[-c <cell name>] [-noa] [-l] [-v]
[-e] [-nor]
[-co <config directory>]
[-h]

DESCRIPTION

The vos create command creates a read/write volume with the name specified by the -name argument at the site specified by the -server and -partition arguments. In addition, the command allocates or sets the following:

Volume ID numbers for the read/write volume and its associated read-only and backup volumes (this command does not actually create the latter two types of volume). A volume ID number is an identification number guaranteed to be unique within a cell.

An access control list ( ACL ) associated with the volume’s root directory, which takes the same name as volume’s mount point when the volume is mounted with the fs mkmount command. An entry that grants all seven permissions to the members of the system:administrators group is automatically placed on the ACL. (In addition, the File Server by default always implicitly grants the "l" (lookup) and "a" (administer) permissions on every ACL to members of the system:administrators group, even when the group does not appear on an ACL ; use the -implicit argument to the fileserver initialization command to alter the set of rights on a server-by-server basis if desired.)

The volume’s space quota, set to 5000 kilobyte blocks by default. Use the -maxquota argument to specify a different quota, or use the fs setquota command to change the volume’s quota after mounting the volume with the fs mkmount command.

The volume is empty when created. To access it via the Cache Manager, mount it in the file space by using the fs mkmount command.

CAUTIONS

Currently, the maximum quota for a volume is 2 terabytes (2^41 bytes). Note that this only affects the volume’s quota; a volume may grow much larger if the volume quota is disabled. However, volumes over 2 terabytes in size may be impractical to move, and may have their size incorrectly reported by some tools, such as fs_listquota(1).

OPTIONS

-server <server name>

Identifies the file server machine on which to create the read/write volume. Provide the machine’s IP address or its host name (either fully qualified or using an unambiguous abbreviation). For details, see vos(1).

-partition <partition name>

Identifies the partition on which to create the read/write volume, on the file server machine specified by the -server argument. Provide the partition’s complete name with preceding slash (for example, "/vicepa") or use one of the three acceptable abbreviated forms. For details, see vos(1).

-name <volume name>

Specifies a name for the read/write volume. The maximum length is 22 characters, which can include any alphanumeric or punctuation character. By convention, periods separate the fields in a name. Do not apply the ".backup" or ".readonly" extension to a read/write volume name; they are reserved for the Volume Server to add to the read/write name when creating those backup and read-only volumes respectively.

-maxquota <initial quota>

Specifies the maximum amount of disk space the volume can use. The size should be a positive integer followed by an optional suffix: "K" for kibibytes (1024 bytes, the default), "M" for mebibytes (1024 kibibytes), "G" for gibibytes (1024 mebibytes), and "T" for tebibytes (1024 gibibytes). The value 0 (zero) grants an unlimited quota, but the size of the disk partition that houses the volume places an absolute limit on its size. If this argument is omitted, the default value is "5000K".

-id <volume ID >

Specifies the volume ID for the read/write volume. If this options is not specified, or the given volume ID is 0, a volume ID will be allocated for the volume automatically. The volume IDs allocated should be fine for almost all cases, so you should almost never need to specify this option.

-roid <readonly volume ID >

Specifies the volume ID for the readonly volume corresponding to the read/write volume that is being created. The readonly volume will not be created; this merely specifies what volume ID the readonly volume will use when it is created. If a volume ID of 0 is specified here, no readonly volume ID will be assigned to the created volume immediately. A readonly volume ID can still be assigned later when vos addsite is run; if a volume does not have a readonly volume ID associated with it by the time vos release is run, a volume ID will be allocated for it.

If this option is not specified, the default readonly volume ID is one number higher than the read-write volume ID, whether or not that ID was manually specified.

As with the -id option, the default allocated volume IDs should be sufficient for almost all cases, so you should almost never need to specify them explicitly. This option is available in OpenAFS versions 1.5.61 or later.

-cell <cell name>

Names the cell in which to run the command. Do not combine this argument with the -localauth flag. For more details, see vos(1).

-noauth

Assigns the unprivileged identity "anonymous" to the issuer. Do not combine this flag with the -localauth flag. For more details, see vos(1).

-localauth

Constructs a server ticket using a key from the local /etc/openafs/server/KeyFile file. The vos command interpreter presents it to the Volume Server and Volume Location Server during mutual authentication. Do not combine this flag with the -cell argument or -noauth flag. For more details, see vos(1).

-verbose

Produces on the standard output stream a detailed trace of the command’s execution. If this argument is omitted, only warnings and error messages appear.

-encrypt

Encrypts the command so that the operation’s results are not transmitted across the network in clear text. This option is available in OpenAFS versions 1.4.11 or later and 1.5.60 or later.

-noresolve

Shows all servers as IP addresses instead of the DNS name. This is very useful when the server address is registered as 127.0.0.1 or when dealing with multi-homed servers. This option is available in OpenAFS versions 1.4.8 or later and 1.5.35 or later.

-config <configuration directory>

Set the location of the configuration directory to be used. This defaults to /etc/openafs, except if -localauth is specified, in which case the default is /etc/openafs/server. This option allows the use of alternative configuration locations for testing purposes.

-help

Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options are ignored.

OUTPUT

The Volume Server produces the following message to confirm that it created the volume:

Volume <volume_ID> created on partition <partition_name> of <machine_name>

EXAMPLES

The following command creates the read/write volume "user.pat" on the /vicepf partition of the file server machine "fs4.example.com".

% vos create -server fs4.example.com -partition /vicepf -name user.pat
Volume user.pat created on partition /vicepf of fs4.example.com

PRIVILEGE REQUIRED

The issuer must be listed in the /etc/openafs/server/UserList file on the machine specified with the -server argument and on each database server machine. If the -localauth flag is included, the issuer must instead be logged on to a server machine as the local superuser "root".

SEE ALSO

vos(1)

COPYRIGHT

IBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/>; All Rights Reserved.

This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.