Okay, so I'm having to work within user quotas on a linux system, and need to be able to find out the device name (e.g - /dev/md2
) for a given path so that I can lookup the correct quota for that path.
Now, I can get the mount point easily enough using:
df -k "/volume1/foo/bar" | tail -1 | awk '{ print $6 }'
However I'm not sure of the best way to then take that mount point and convert it into a device name?
To further complicate matters, the mount point that I get from the above command may in fact be an encrypted folder, in which case I may have something that looks like:
/dev/md2 -> /volume1
/volume1/@Foo@ -> /volume1/Foo
Meaning that the above df
command will identify a mount point of /volume1/Foo. However, I need a reliable, platform independent way to work way my way through mount points and find the actual device name I need for use with quota
.
Specifically; I can't just rely on the first part of the path being the mount point of the device, as I may be working with environments that mount volumes in more specific locations, such as OS X that puts mounts into /Volumes/ for example.
stat -c%d /volume1/foo/bar
. Then you have to find the special node in/dev
that bears that device number. I can't find any good generic scripting tools that do that last part for you, but if you have grub installed then you can always usegrub-probe
to solve your entire question with one command line so:/usr/sbin/grub-probe --target=device /volume1/foo/bar
stat
- not all platforms have it OOTB (e.g. Solaris) and BSD (OSX)stat
uses-f
instead of-c
.