Linux/command/edquota
computing: software: operating systems: Linux: edquota
Manpage
NAME
edquota - edit user quotas
SYNOPSIS
- edquota [ -p protoname ] [ -ug ] [ -r ] [ -F format-name ] username...
- edquota [ -ug ] [ -F format-name ] -t
DESCRIPTION
edquota is a quota editor. One or more users or groups may be specified on the command line. For each user or group a temporary file is created with an ASCII representation of the current disk quotas for that user or group and an editor is then invoked on the file. The quotas may then be modified, new quotas added, etc. Setting a quota to zero indicates that no quota should be imposed.
Users are permitted to exceed their soft limits for a grace period that may be specified per filesystem. Once the grace period has expired, the soft limit is enforced as a hard limit.
The current usage information in the file is for informational purposes; only the hard and soft limits can be changed.
Upon leaving the editor, edquota reads the temporary file and modifies the binary quota files to reflect the changes made.
The editor invoked is vi(1) unless either the EDITOR or the VISUAL environment variable specifies otherwise.
Only the super-user may edit quotas.
OPTIONS
- -r
- Edit also non-local quota use rpc.rquotad on remote server to set quota. The -n option is equivalent, and is maintained for backward compatibility.
- -u
- Edit the user quota. This is the default.
- -g
- Edit the group quota.
- -p protoname
- Duplicate the quotas of the prototypical user specified for each user specified. This is the normal mechanism used to initialize quotas for groups of users.
- -F format-name
- Edit quota for specified format (ie. don't perform format autodetection). Possible format names are: vfsold (version 1 quota), vfsv0 (version 2 quota), rpc (quota over NFS), xfs (quota on XFS filesystem)
- -t
- Edit the soft time limits for each filesystem. In old quota format if the time limits are zero, the default time limits in <linux/quota.h> are used. In new quota format time limits must be specified (there is no default value set in kernel). Time units of seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, and months are understood. Time limits are printed in the greatest possible time unit such that the value is greater than or equal to one.
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
- mounted filesystems table
SEE ALSO
quota(1), vi(1), quotactl(2), quotacheck(8), quotaon(8), repquota(8)