Administration Reference
Purpose
Removes a volume from a site
Synopsis
vos remove [-server <machine name>] [-partition <partition name>]
-id <volume name or ID> [-cell <cell name>]
[-noauth] [-localauth] [-verbose] [-help]
vos remo [-s <machine name>] [-p <partition name>] -i <volume name or ID>
[-c <cell name>] [-n] [-l] [-v] [-h]
Description
The vos remove command removes the indicated volume from the
partition on which it resides. The Volume Location Database (VLDB)
record is altered appropriately, as described in the following
paragraphs. Use this command to remove any of the three types of
volumes; the effect depends on the type.
- If the -id argument names the read/write volume (that is,
specifies the volume's base name), both it and the associated backup
volume are removed from the partition that houses them. The
-server and -partition arguments are optional, because
there can be only one read/write site. When the volume is removed, the
site information is also removed from the VLDB entry. The read/write
and backup volume ID numbers no longer appear in the output from the vos
listvldb or vos examine commands, but they are preserved
internally. Read-only sites, if any, are not affected, but cannot be
changed unless a read/write site is again defined. The site count
reported by the vos examine and vos listvldb commands as
number of sites decrements by one. The entire VLDB entry is
removed if there are no read-only sites.
- If the -id argument names a read-only volume, it is removed
from the partition that houses it, and the corresponding site information is
removed from the VLDB entry. The site count reported by the vos
examine and vos listvldb commands as number of
sites decrements by one for each volume you remove. If there is
more than one read-only site, the -server argument (and optionally
-partition argument) must be used to specify the site from which to
remove the volume. If there is only one read-only site, the
-id argument is sufficient; if there is also no read/write
volume in this case, the entire VLDB entry is removed.
- If the -id argument names a backup volume, it is removed from
the partition that houses it. The -server and
-partition arguments are optional, because there can be only one
backup site. The backup volume ID number no longer appears in the
output from the vos listvldb command or in the corresponding
portion of the output from the vos examine command, but is
preserved internally.
This command is the most appropriate one for removing volumes in almost all
cases. Other commands that remove only volumes or only VLDB entries
(such as the vos delentry, vos remsite and vos
zap commands) by definition can put the volumes and VLDB out of
sync. Use them only in the special circumstances mentioned on their
reference pages. Like the vos delentry command, this command
can remove a VLDB entry when no corresponding volumes exist on the file server
machine. Like the vos zap command, this command can remove a
volume that does not have a VLDB entry, as long as the volume is online,
-server and -partition arguments are provided, and the
-id argument specifies the volume's ID number.
Options
- -server
- Identifies the file server machine that houses the volume to
remove. It is necessary only when the -id argument names a
read-only volume that exists at multiple sites. Provide the
machine's IP address or its host name (either fully qualified or using an
unambiguous abbreviation). For details, see the introductory reference
page for the vos command suite.
- -partition
- Identifies the partition (on the file server machine specified by the
-server argument) that houses the volume to remove. Provide
the partition's complete name with preceding slash (for example,
/vicepa) or use one of the three acceptable abbreviated
forms. For details, see the introductory reference page for the
vos command suite.
Including this argument is necessary only when the -id argument
names a read-only volume that exists at multiple sites. Provide the
-server argument along with this one.
- -id
- Identifies the volume to remove, either by its complete name or volume ID
number. If identifying a read-only or backup volume by name, include
the appropriate extension (.readonly or
.backup).
Note: | If the -server and -partition arguments are omitted,
the -id switch must be provided.
|
- -cell
- Names the cell in which to run the command. Do not combine this
argument with the -localauth flag. For more details, see the
introductory vos reference page.
- -noauth
- Assigns the unprivileged identity anonymous to the
issuer. Do not combine this flag with the -localauth
flag. For more details, see the introductory vos reference
page.
- -localauth
- Constructs a server ticket using a key from the local
/usr/afs/etc/KeyFile file. The vos command
interpreter presents it to the Volume Server and Volume Location Server during
mutual authentication. Do not combine this flag with the
-cell argument or -noauth flag. For more details,
see the introductory vos reference page.
- -verbose
- Produces on the standard output stream a detailed trace of the
command's execution. If this argument is omitted, only warnings
and error messages appear.
- -help
- Prints the online help for this command. All other valid options
are ignored.
Examples
The following example removes the read/write volume
user.terry and its backup version, if any.
% vos remove -id user.terry
The following example removes the read-only volume
root.afs.readonly from one of its sites, the
/vicepa partition on the file server machine
fs1.abc.com.
% vos remove fs1.abc.com a root.afs.readonly
Privilege Required
The issuer must be listed in the /usr/afs/etc/UserList file on
the machine specified with the -server argument and on each
database server machine. If the -localauth flag is included,
the issuer must instead be logged on to a server machine as the local
superuser root.
Related Information
vos
vos delentry
vos remsite
vos zap
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