repquota(8)
NAME
repquota - summarize quotas for a filesystem
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/repquota [ -vspiug ] [ -c | -C ] [ -t | -n ] [ -F format-name
] filesystem...
/usr/sbin/repquota [ -avtpsiug ] [ -c | -C ] [ -t | -n ] [ -F format-
name ]
DESCRIPTION
repquota prints a summary of the disc usage and quotas for the
specified file systems. For each user the current number of files and
amount of space (in kilobytes) is printed, along with any quota limits
set with edquota(8) or setquota(8). In the second column repquota
prints two characters marking which limits are exceeded. If user is
over his space softlimit or reaches his space hardlimit in case
softlimit is unset, the first character is '+'. Otherwise the character
printed is '-'. The second character denotes the state of inode usage
analogously.
repquota has to translate ids of all users/groups to names (unless
option -n was specified) so it may take a while to print all the
information. To make translating as fast as possible repquota tries to
detect (by reading /etc/nsswitch.conf) whether entries are stored in
standard plain text file or in a database and either translates chunks
of 1024 names or each name individually. You can override this
autodetection by -c or -C options.
OPTIONS
-a, --all
Report on all filesystems indicated in /etc/mtab to be read-
write with quotas.
-v, --verbose
Report all quotas, even if there is no usage. Be also more
verbose about quotafile information.
-c, --cache
Cache entries to report and translate uids/gids to names in big
chunks by scanning all users (default). This is good (fast)
behaviour when using /etc/passwd file.
-C, --no-cache
Translate individual entries. This is faster when you have users
stored in database.
-t, --truncate-names
Truncate user/group names longer than 9 characters. This results
in nicer output when there are such names.
-n, --no-names
Don't resolve UIDs/GIDs to names. This can speedup printing a
lot.
-s, --human-readable
Try to report used space, number of used inodes and limits in
more appropriate units than the default ones.
-p, --raw-grace
When user is in grace period, report time in seconds since epoch
when his grace time runs out (or has run out). Field is '0' when
no grace time is in effect. This is especially useful when
parsing output by a script.
-i, --no-autofs
Ignore mountpoints mounted by automounter.
-F, --format=format-name
Report quota for specified format (ie. don't perform format
autodetection). Possible format names are: vfsold Original
quota format with 16-bit UIDs / GIDs, vfsv0 Quota format with
32-bit UIDs / GIDs, 64-bit space usage, 32-bit inode usage and
limits, vfsv1 Quota format with 64-bit quota limits and usage,
xfs (quota on XFS filesystem)
-g, --group
Report quotas for groups.
-u, --user
Report quotas for users. This is the default.
-O, --output=format-name
Output quota report in the specified format. Possible format
names are: default The default format, optimized for console
viewing csv Comma-separated values, a text file with the columns
delimited by commas xml Output is XML encoded, useful for
processing with XSLT
Only the super-user may view quotas which are not their own.
FILES
aquota.user or aquota.group
quota file at the filesystem root (version 2 quota,
non-XFS filesystems)
quota.user or quota.group
quota file at the filesystem root (version 1 quota,
non-XFS filesystems)
/etc/mtab default filesystems
/etc/passwd default set of users
/etc/group default set of groups
SEE ALSO
quota(1), quotactl(2), edquota(8), quotacheck(8), quotaon(8),
quota_nld(8), setquota(8), warnquota(8)
Free and Open Source Software