
Chapter 3: mx Commands 96
kilobytes. (The default is rounded down to the nearest filesystem block.) If
this option is not used, the default will be unlimited.
[--defaultUserSoftLimit <unlimited | #{K,M,G,T}>]
The default soft limit for users on the filesystem who not have not been
assigned an individual limit. unlimited means that the default is unlimited.
The size modifiers are K (kilobytes), M (megabytes), G (gigabytes), or T
(terabytes). If a modifier is not specified, the size is calculated in kilobytes.
(The default is rounded down to the nearest filesystem block.) If this option is
not used, the default will be unlimited.
[--enforceHardLimit <enable|disable>]
Whether hard limits are enforced. The default is disable.
[--logHardLimitViolations <enable|disable>]
Whether violations of the hard limit are logged. The default is disable.
[--logSoftLimitViolations <enable|disable>]
Whether violations of the soft limit are logged. The default is disable.
[--defaultQuotaType <staticdq|dynamicdq>]
Whether the default quotas should be static or dynamic. When staticdq is
used, new users are assigned an explicit limit that is the same as the
filesystem’s default limit. With dyanamicdq, the user’s limit references the
filesystem’s default limit. When the filesystem limit is changed, the user’s
limit also changes to match the new filesystem limit. The default is staticdq.
[--sparseFileAccounting <real|virtual>]
Whether sparse files are counted against the owner’s quota according to the
actual space or the virtual space used by the file. The default is real.
[--quiet]
Do not display command output.
[--force]
Continue with the command even if some specified filesystems already have
quotas enabled.
setdefaults—Set the default hard and soft limits for one or more filesystems
mx quota setdefaults [opt_args] ALL_FILESYSTEMS|<ps device> ...
The optional arguments are:
[--userHardLimit <unlimited | #{K,M,G,T}>]
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