Apple Xsan 2 (Third Edition) User Manual

Page 120

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Appendix B

Using the Command Line

To display an extent count without defragmenting:

$ snfsdefrag -c [-K affinity] [-r] target [target] [...]

To prune a file (remove allocated extents beyond the end of file):

$ snfsdefrag -p [-D] [-v] [-q] [-K affinity] [-m count] [-r] target

[target] [...]

To list files that are candidates for defragmentation:

$ snfsdefrag -l [-D] [-v] [-K affinity] [-m count] [-r]
target

[target] [...]

Parameter

Description

-c

Display an extent count but don’t defragment
target.

-D

Display debugging messages.

-d

Operate on files with other than the current
depth.

-e

Report extents without defragmenting.

-K affinity

Only operate on files with the specified storage
pool affinity.

affinity

– the affinity key (in Xsan, the affinity

key is the same as the name of the storage pool)
You can use the

cvadmin show long

command to see a storage pool’s affinity key.

-k affinity

Allocate new extents on the storage pool with
this affinity.

-l

List files that might benefit from
defragmentation.

-m count

Only operate on files with more than

count

extents.

-p

Prune instead of defragment.

-q

Suppress messages.

-r [target]

Operate recursively to defragment all files in all
folders within the specified target folder.

-s

Allocate new extents on block boundaries.

-v

Display all available information and status
during defragmentation.

Examples

Count the extents in the file datafile:

$ snfsdefrag -c datafile

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