Find out where a mount point is physically located?

Matty Sarro msarro at gmail.com
Fri Oct 29 16:32:09 UTC 2010


That also would work. So it did turn out to be kind of a dumb question, but
at least its giving me some good notes. Thanks guys! Have a wonderful
weekend!!

On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 12:19 PM, Marti, Robert <RJM002 at shsu.edu> wrote:

> ... mount?
> That will show what device is mounted where.
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Oct 29, 2010, at 11:16 AM, "Ken Rossman" <wkrossman at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Oct 29, 2010, at 11:21 AM, Matty Sarro wrote:
> >
> >> Greetings everyone!
> >> I'm hoping this isn't too noobish of a question.
> >> Right now I am working on a server that was configured to a vendor's
> specs.
> >> The vendor then came on site, and deployed their software onto the
> server.
> >> However, there were some extra partitions that we'd created for the
> >> installation and I'm not sure that they were actually used. In / there
> is
> >> now a mount point called /u1. Is there any way that I can correlate that
> >> back to a particular device on the system? I tried df -h and it isn't
> really
> >> helping.
> >
> > There may be a better way, but I was always partial to something like
> this:
> >
> >  # cd /u1
> >  # df .
> >
> > This should show you whether the partition is root or some other
> partition.
> > The physical device will be listed on the left, the mount point on the
> right.
> >
> > KR
> >
> >
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