dfmounts(1M)
dfmounts --
display mounted resource information
Synopsis
dfmounts [-F fstype] [-h] [-o specific_options] [restriction ...]
Description
The generic dfmounts command shows the local resources currently
mounted by clients through a distributed filesystem fstype along
with a list of clients that have the resource mounted.
The output of dfmounts consists of an optional header line
(suppressed with the -h flag) followed by a list of lines
containing whitespace-separated fields.
For each resource, the fields are:
   resource server path clients
where
 resource
- 
The meaning of resource is dependent upon the distributed file
system type that is being used.
 server
- 
Specifies the system from which the resource was mounted.
 path
- 
Specifies the pathname that was given to the
share(1M)
command.
 clients
- 
The format of clients is dependent upon the distributed file
system type that is being used.
A field may be NULL. Each NULL field is indicated by a
hyphen (-) unless the remainder of the fields on the line
are also NULL. In this case, it is blank.Options
The following options are available to the dfmounts command:
 -F
- 
Specifies the filesystem type. If this option is omitted, dfmounts
is executed for each configured distributed filesystem type.
 -h
- 
Suppresses the header line in dfmounts output.
 -o specific_options
 restriction
- 
Depend upon the distributed filesystem (fstype) being used. For
a list of specific_options and for details of the availability
and semantics of restriction, refer to the documentation on the
filesystem type being used.
specific_options and restriction should be used in
conjunction with the -F option.
 
If dfmounts is entered without arguments, all resources
currently shared on the local system, along with resources that are
available for mounting, are displayed, regardless of filesystem type.Files
/etc/dfs/fstypes
References
dfmounts(1nfs),
dfshares(1M),
mount(1M),
share(1M),
unshare(1M)
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc.  All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004