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xfs_quota(8)							  xfs_quota(8)

NAME
       xfs_quota - manage use of quota on XFS filesystems

SYNOPSIS
       xfs_quota  [  -x	] [ -p prog ] [	-c cmd ] ... [ -d project ] ...	[ path
       ... ]
       xfs_quota -V

DESCRIPTION
       xfs_quota is a utility for reporting and	 editing  various  aspects  of
       filesystem quota.

       The options to xfs_quota	are:

       -c cmd	 xfs_quota  commands may be run	interactively (the default) or
		 as arguments on the command line. Multiple -c	arguments  may
		 be  given.   The commands are run in the sequence given, then
		 the program exits.

       -p prog	 Set the program name for prompts and some error messages, the
		 default value is xfs_quota.

       -x	 Enable	 expert	mode.  All of the administrative commands (see
		 the ADMINISTRATOR COMMANDS section below) which allow modifi-
		 cations  to  the  quota  system  are available	only in	expert
		 mode.

       -d project
		 Project names or numeric identifiers may  be  specified  with
		 this  option,	which  restricts  the output of	the individual
		 xfs_quota commands to the set of projects specified. Multiple
		 -d arguments may be given.

       -V	 Prints	the version number and exits.

       The  optional  path  argument(s)	can be used to specify mount points or
       device files which identify XFS filesystems. The	output of the individ-
       ual  xfs_quota  commands	will then be restricted	to the set of filesys-
       tems specified.

       This manual page	is divided into	two sections  -	 firstly,  information
       for users of filesystems	with quota enabled, and	the xfs_quota commands
       of interest to such users; and then information which is	useful only to
       administrators  of  XFS	filesystems using quota	and the	quota commands
       which allow modifications to the	quota system.

       Note that common	to almost all of  the  individual  commands  described
       below  are the options for specifying which quota types are of interest
       - user quota (-u), group	quota (-g), and/or project quota (-p).	 Also,
       several	commands  provide  options  to	operate	on "blocks used" (-b),
       "inodes used" (-i), and/or "realtime blocks used" (-r).

       Many commands also have extensive online	help. Use the help command for
       more details on any command.

QUOTA OVERVIEW
       In  most	computing environments,	disk space is not infinite.  The quota
       subsystem provides a mechanism to control usage of disk space.	Quotas
       can  be	set  for each individual user on any/all of the	local filesys-
       tems.  The quota	subsystem warns	users when they	exceed their  allotted
       limit,  but  allows  some extra space for current work (hard limit/soft
       limit).	In addition, XFS filesystems with limit	enforcement turned off
       can be used as an effective disk	usage accounting system.

   Users' View of Disk Quotas
       To  most	 users,	disk quotas are	either of no concern or	a fact of life
       that cannot be avoided.	There are two  possible	 quotas	 that  can  be
       imposed	- a limit can be set on	the amount of space a user can occupy,
       and there may be	a limit	on the number of files (inodes)	he can own.

       The quota command provides information on the quotas that have been set
       by the system administrators and	current	usage.

       There  are  four	 numbers  for  each  limit:  current usage, soft limit
       (quota),	hard limit, and	time limit.  The soft limit is the  number  of
       1K-blocks  (or  files)  that the	user is	expected to remain below.  The
       hard limit cannot be exceeded.  If a  user's  usage  reaches  the  hard
       limit,  further	requests for space (or attempts	to create a file) fail
       with the	"Quota exceeded" (EDQUOT) error.

       When a user exceeds the soft limit, the timer is	enabled.  Any time the
       quota drops below the soft limits, the timer is disabled.  If the timer
       pops, the particular limit that has been	exceeded is treated as if  the
       hard limit has been reached, and	no more	resources are allocated	to the
       user.  The only way to reset this condition, short of turning off limit
       enforcement  or	increasing  the	limit, is to reduce usage below	quota.
       Only the	superuser (i.e.	a sufficiently capable process)	 can  set  the
       time limits and this is done on a per filesystem	basis.

   Surviving When the Quota Limit Is Reached
       In  most	cases, the only	way for	a user to recover from over-quota con-
       ditions is to abort whatever activity is	in progress on the  filesystem
       that  has reached its limit, remove sufficient files to bring the limit
       back below quota, and retry the failed program.
       However,	if a user is in	the editor and a write	fails  because	of  an
       over  quota  situation, that is not a suitable course of	action.	 It is
       most likely that	initially attempting to	write the file	has  truncated
       its  previous  contents,	 so if the editor is aborted without correctly
       writing the file, not only are the recent changes  lost,	 but  possibly
       much, or	even all, of the contents that previously existed.
       There  are several possible safe	exits for a user caught	in this	situa-
       tion.  He can use the editor shell escape command to examine  his  file
       space  and  remove  surplus  files.  Alternatively, using sh(1),	he can
       suspend the editor, remove some files, then resume it.  A third	possi-
       bility is to write the file to some other filesystem (perhaps to	a file
       on /tmp)	where the user's quota has not been exceeded.  Then after rec-
       tifying the quota situation, the	file can be moved back to the filesys-
       tem it belongs on.

USER COMMANDS
       print  Lists all	paths with devices/project identifiers.	 The path list
	      can  come	 from several places - the command line, the mount ta-
	      ble, and the /etc/projects file.

       df     See the free command.

       quota [ -gpu ] [	-bir ] [ -hnNv ] [ -f file ] [ ID | name ] ...
	      Show individual usage and	limits,	for  a	single	user  name  or
	      numeric  user  ID.   The -h option reports in a "human-readable"
	      format similar to	the df(1) command. The -n option  reports  the
	      numeric  IDs  rather  than  the  name.  The  -N option omits the
	      header. The -v option outputs verbose information. The -f	option
	      sends the	output to file instead of stdout.

       free [ -bir ] [ -hN ] [ -f file ]
	      Reports  filesystem  usage, much like the	df(1) utility.	It can
	      show usage for blocks, inode, and/or realtime block  space,  and
	      shows  used, free, and total available.  If project quota	are in
	      use (see the DIRECTORY TREE QUOTA	section	below),	it  will  also
	      report  utilisation for those projects (directory	trees).	The -h
	      option reports in	a "human-readable" format. The -N option omits
	      the  header. The -f option outputs the report to file instead of
	      stdout.

       help [ command ]
	      Online help for all commands, or one specific command.

       quit   Exit xfs_quota.

       q      See the quit command.

QUOTA ADMINISTRATION
       The XFS quota system differs to that of other filesystems in  a	number
       of ways.	 Most importantly, XFS considers quota information as filesys-
       tem metadata and	uses journaling	to provide a higher level guarantee of
       consistency.  As	such, it is administered differently, in particular:

       1.     The  quotacheck  command	has no effect on XFS filesystems.  The
	      first time quota accounting is turned on (at  mount  time),  XFS
	      does  an	automatic quotacheck internally; afterwards, the quota
	      system will always be completely	consistent  until  quotas  are
	      manually turned off.

       2.     There  is	 no  need  for	quota  file(s)	in the root of the XFS
	      filesystem.

       3.     XFS distinguishes	between	quota accounting  and  limit  enforce-
	      ment.   Quota accounting must be turned on at the	time of	mount-
	      ing the XFS filesystem.  However,	it is possible to turn	on/off
	      limit  enforcement  any time quota accounting is turned on.  The
	      "quota" option to	the mount command turns	on both	 (user)	 quota
	      accounting  and  enforcement.   The "uqnoenforce"	option must be
	      used to turn on user accounting with limit enforcement disabled.

       4.     Turning  on  quotas on the root filesystem is slightly different
	      from the above.  For IRIX	XFS, refer to quotaon(1M).  For	 Linux
	      XFS,  the	 quota	mount  flags must be passed in with the	"root-
	      flags=" boot parameter.

       5.     It is useful to use the state to monitor the XFS quota subsystem
	      at  various  stages - it can be used to see if quotas are	turned
	      on, and also to monitor the space	occupied by the	 quota	system
	      itself..

       6.     There  is	a mechanism built into xfsdump that allows quota limit
	      information to be	backed up for later  restoration,  should  the
	      need arise.

       7.     Quota limits cannot be set before	turning	on quotas on.

       8.     XFS  filesystems keep quota accounting on	the superuser (user ID
	      zero), and the tool will display the superuser's usage  informa-
	      tion.   However, limits are never	enforced on the	superuser (nor
	      are they enforced	for group and project ID zero).

       9.     XFS filesystems perform quota accounting whether	the  user  has
	      quota limits or not.

       10.    XFS  supports  the notion	of project quota, which	can be used to
	      implement	a form of directory tree quota	(i.e.  to  restrict  a
	      directory	 tree  to only being able to use up a component	of the
	      filesystems available space; or simply  to  keep	track  of  the
	      amount of	space used, or number of inodes, within	the tree).

ADMINISTRATOR COMMANDS
       path [ N	]
	      Lists all	paths with devices/project identifiers or set the cur-
	      rent path	to the Nth list	entry (the current  path  is  used  by
	      many  of the commands described here, it identifies the filesys-
	      tem toward which a command is directed).	The path list can come
	      from several places - the	command	line, the mount	table, and the
	      /etc/projects file.

       report [	-gpu ] [ -bir ]	[ -ahntLNU ] [ -f file ]
	      Report filesystem	quota information.   This  reports  all	 quota
	      usage  for  a  filesystem,  for  the specified quota type	(u/g/p
	      and/or blocks/inodes/realtime).  It reports blocks in 1KB	 units
	      by  default.  The	-h option reports in a "human-readable"	format
	      similar to the df(1) command. The	-f option outputs  the	report
	      to file instead of stdout. The -a	option reports on all filesys-
	      tems. The	-n option outputs the numeric ID instead of the	 name.
	      The  -L  and  -U	options	 specify  lower	and upper ID bounds to
	      report on. The -N	option reports information without the	header
	      line. The	-t option performs a terse report.

       state [ -gpu ] [	-av ] [	-f file	]
	      Report  overall  quota  state  information.  This	reports	on the
	      state of quota accounting, quota enforcement, and	the number  of
	      extents  being used by quota metadata within the filesystem. The
	      -f option	outputs	state information to file instead  of  stdout.
	      The  -a option reports state on all filesystems and not just the
	      current path.

       limit [ -gpu ] bsoft=N |	bhard=N	| isoft=N | ihard=N | rtbsoft=N	| rtb-
	      hard=N -d	| id | name
	      Set   quota  block  limits  (bhard/bsoft),  inode	 count	limits
	      (ihard/isoft) and/or realtime  block  limits  (rtbhard/rtbsoft).
	      The  -d  option  (defaults) can be used to set the default value
	      that will	be used, otherwise a specific user/group/project  name
	      or numeric identifier must be specified.

       timer [ -gpu ] [	-bir ] value
	      Allows  the  quota  enforcement timeout (i.e. the	amount of time
	      allowed to pass before the soft limits are enforced as the  hard
	      limits)  to be modified. The current timeout setting can be dis-
	      played using the state command. The value	argument is  a	number
	      of seconds, but units of 'minutes', 'hours', 'days', and 'weeks'
	      are also understood (as are their	abbreviations 'm',  'h',  'd',
	      and 'w').

       warn [ -gpu ] [ -bir ] value -d | id | name
	      Allows  the  quota  warnings  limit  (i.e. the number of times a
	      warning will be send to someone over quota)  to  be  viewed  and
	      modified.	 The  -d  option  (defaults)  can  be  used to set the
	      default  time  that  will	 be   used,   otherwise	  a   specific
	      user/group/project name or numeric identifier must be specified.
	      NOTE: this feature is not	currently implemented.

       enable [	-gpu ] [ -v ]
	      Switches on quota	enforcement for	the filesystem	identified  by
	      the  current  path.   This  requires the filesystem to have been
	      mounted with quota enabled, and for accounting to	 be  currently
	      active.  The  -v	option	(verbose) displays the state after the
	      operation	has completed.

       disable [ -gpu ]	[ -v ]
	      Disables	quota  enforcement,  while  leaving  quota  accounting
	      active.  The  -v	option	(verbose) displays the state after the
	      operation	has completed.

       off [ -gpu ] [ -v ]
	      Permanently switches quota off for the filesystem	identified  by
	      the  current  path.   Quota  can only be switched	back on	subse-
	      quently by unmounting and	then mounting again.

       remove [	-gpu ] [ -v ]
	      Remove any space allocated to quota metadata from	the filesystem
	      identified  by  the  current path.  Quota	must not be enabled on
	      the filesystem, else this	operation will report an error.

       dump [ -gpu ] [ -f file ]
	      Dump out quota limit information for backup utilities, either to
	      standard	output	(default) or to	a file.	 This is only the lim-
	      its, not the usage information, of course.

       restore [ -gpu ]	[ -f file ]
	      Restore quota limits from	a backup file.	The file  must	be  in
	      the format produced by the dump command.

       quot [ -gpu ] [ -bir ] [	-acnv ]	[ -f file ]
	      Summarize	filesystem ownership, by user, group or	project.  This
	      command uses a special XFS "bulkstat" interface to quickly  scan
	      an entire	filesystem and report usage information.  This command
	      can be used even when filesystem quota are not enabled, as it is
	      a	full-filesystem	scan (it may also take a long time...).	The -a
	      option displays information on all filesystems.  The  -c	option
	      displays a histogram instead of a	report.	The -n option displays
	      numeric IDs rather than names. The -v  option  displays  verbose
	      information.  The	 -f  option send the output to file instead of
	      stdout.

       project [ -cCs [	-d depth ] [ -p	path ] id | name ]
	      The -c, -C, and -s options allow the directory tree quota	mecha-
	      nism  to be maintained.  -d allows to limit recursion level when
	      processing project directories and -p allows to specify  project
	      paths  at	command	line ( instead of /etc/projects	). All options
	      are discussed in detail below.

DIRECTORY TREE QUOTA
       The project quota mechanism in XFS can be used to implement a  form  of
       directory  tree quota, where a specified	directory and all of the files
       and subdirectories below	it (i.e. a tree) can be	restricted to using  a
       subset of the available space in	the filesystem.

       A  managed  tree	 must  be  setup  initially using the -s option	to the
       project command.	The specified project name or identifier is matched to
       one  or	more  trees defined in /etc/projects, and these	trees are then
       recursively descended to	mark the affected inodes as being part of that
       tree.   This  process  sets an inode flag and the project identifier on
       every file in the affected tree.	 Once this has been  done,  new	 files
       created	in  the	tree will automatically	be accounted to	the tree based
       on their	project	identifier.  An	attempt	to create a  hard  link	 to  a
       file  in	 the  tree will	only succeed if	the project identifier matches
       the project identifier for the tree.  The xfs_io	utility	can be used to
       set  the	project	ID for an arbitrary file, but this can only be done by
       a privileged user.

       A previously setup tree can  be	cleared	 from  project	quota  control
       through	use  of	 the project -C	option,	which will recursively descend
       the tree, clearing the affected inodes from project quota control.

       Finally,	the project -c option can be used to check whether a  tree  is
       setup,  it reports nothing if the tree is correct, otherwise it reports
       the paths of inodes which do not	have the project ID of the rest	of the
       tree, or	if the inode flag is not set.

       Option  -d  can	be used	to limit recursion level (-1 is	infinite, 0 is
       top level only, 1 is first level	... ).	Option -p adds possibility  to
       specify	project	paths in command line without a	need for /etc/projects
       to exist. Note that if projects file exists then	it is also used.

EXAMPLES
       Enabling	quota enforcement on an	XFS filesystem (restrict a user	 to  a
       set amount of space).

	    # mount -o uquota /dev/xvm/home /home
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c 'limit bsoft=500m	bhard=550m tanya' /home
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c report /home

       Enabling	project	quota on an XFS	filesystem (restrict files in log file
       directories to only using 1 gigabyte of space).

	    # mount -o prjquota	/dev/xvm/var /var
	    # echo 42:/var/log >> /etc/projects
	    # echo logfiles:42 >> /etc/projid
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c 'project -s logfiles' /var
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c 'limit -p	bhard=1g logfiles' /var

       Same as above without a need for	configuration files.

	    # rm -f /etc/projects /etc/projid
	    # mount -o prjquota	/dev/xvm/var /var
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c 'project -s -p /var/log 42' /var
	    # xfs_quota	-x -c 'limit -p	bhard=1g 42' /var

CAVEATS
       XFS implements delayed allocation (aka. allocate-on-flush) and this has
       implications  for the quota subsystem.  Since quota accounting can only
       be done when blocks are actually	allocated, it  is  possible  to	 issue
       (buffered)  writes  into	 a  file  and  not  see	 the usage immediately
       updated.	 Only when the data is actually	written	out, either via	one of
       the  kernels  flushing  mechanisms,  or	via a manual sync(2), will the
       usage reported reflect what has actually	been written.

       In addition, the	XFS allocation mechanism will always reserve the maxi-
       mum  amount of space required before proceeding with an allocation.  If
       insufficient space for this reservation is available, due to the	 block
       quota  limit  being reached for example,	this may result	in the alloca-
       tion failing even though	there is sufficient space.  Quota  enforcement
       can  thus  sometimes happen in situations where the user	is under quota
       and the end result of some operation would still	 have  left  the  user
       under  quota  had  the  operation been allowed to run its course.  This
       additional overhead is typically	in the range of	tens of	blocks.

       Both of these properties	are unavoidable	side effects of	 the  way  XFS
       operates, so should be kept in mind when	assigning block	limits.

BUGS
       Quota  support  for  filesystems	 with  realtime	 subvolumes is not yet
       implemented, nor	is the quota warning mechanism (the Linux warnquota(8)
       tool can	be used	to provide similar functionality on that platform).

FILES
       /etc/projects	   Mapping  of numeric project identifiers to directo-
			   ries	trees.
       /etc/projid	   Mapping of numeric project identifiers  to  project
			   names.

IRIX SEE ALSO
       quotaon(1M), xfs(4).

LINUX SEE ALSO
       warnquota(8), xfs(5).

SEE ALSO
       df(1), mount(1),	sync(2), projid(5), projects(5).

								  xfs_quota(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | QUOTA OVERVIEW | USER COMMANDS | QUOTA ADMINISTRATION | ADMINISTRATOR COMMANDS | DIRECTORY TREE QUOTA | EXAMPLES | CAVEATS | BUGS | FILES | IRIX SEE ALSO | LINUX SEE ALSO | SEE ALSO

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