Thomas M. Skeren III schrieb:
> Probably the only way you will get what you want.
No.
> I don't think Windows
> can understand how a directory on a "drive" can be larger than the
> "drive" itself.
Yes, it can.
We have a DFS Share called "apps" assigned to our AD called
"EUROPE".
C:\>dir \\
On Wednesday 19 January 2005 08:33 am, Thomas M. Skeren III wrote:
> Well not really. The drive must be "Dynamic" . This is something I
> have not looked fully into, but it is not a traditional partitoning
> thing.
It doesn't need to be a dynamic disk and there's virtually nothing
special about
Alexander Skwar wrote:
Thomas M. Skeren III schrieb:
I don't think Windows
can understand how a directory on a "drive" can be larger than the
"drive" itself.
I disagree.
On Windows XP (and 2000?), you can "mount"
Well not really. The drive must be "Dynamic" . This is something I have
Thomas M. Skeren III schrieb:
> I don't think Windows
> can understand how a directory on a "drive" can be larger than the
> "drive" itself.
I disagree.
On Windows XP (and 2000?), you can "mount" a local drive in a
directory. This means, that C:\Appl can be a complete partition.
Suppose that
Alexander Skwar wrote:
Hello!
Running Samba 3.x on HP-UX 11.00, Linux and Solaris.
I've got a problem with the free space calculation of Samba. The problem
is, that Samba only seems to return the free space available in the top
directory of a share and not the free space available in the current
di
Bart Hendrix schrieb:
> Could you please do the following command: df -h
>
> And paste the result ;-)
Hm, I cannot. I made up the example to simplyfy it.
The closest I can offer to "df -h" output is what I wrote in the OP:
Directory Mountpoint Free space
/Shares
Hi
Could you please do the following command: df -h
And paste the result ;-)
Thanx
bart
- Original Message -
From: "Alexander Skwar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2005 9:22 AM
Subject: [Samba] Free space calculation gets it wrong
Hello!
Running Sa
Hello!
Running Samba 3.x on HP-UX 11.00, Linux and Solaris.
I've got a problem with the free space calculation of Samba. The problem
is, that Samba only seems to return the free space available in the top
directory of a share and not the free space available in the current
directory. That's a pro