Veritas File System 5.1 SP1 Administrator"s Guide (5900-1499, April 2011)

To display information on mounted file systems
Invoke the mount command without options:
# mount
/dev/vg00/lvol3 on / type vxfs ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog \
Wed Jun 5 3:23:40 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol8 on /var type vxfs ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog \
Wed Jun 5 3:23:56 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol7 on /usr type vxfs ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog \
Wed Jun 5 3:23:56 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol6 on /tmp type vxfs ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog \
Wed Jun 5 3:23:56 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol5 on /opt type vxfs ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog \
Wed Jun 5 3:23:57 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol1 on /stand type hfs defaults on \
Thu Jun 6 4:17:20 2004
/dev/vgdb/lvol13 on /oracle type vxfs \
ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog Thu Jun 6 4:17:20 2004
/dev/vg00/lvol4 on /home type vxfs \
ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog on Thu Jun 6 4:17:20 2004
/dev/vgdb/lvol9 on /bench type vxfs \
ioerror=mwdisable,delaylog on Thu Jun 6 4:17:11 2004
Identifying file system types
Use the fstyp command to determine the file system type for a specified file
system. This is useful when a file system was created elsewhere and you want to
know its type.
See the fstyp(1M) manual page.
To determine a file system's type
Use the fstyp command to determine a file system's type:
fstyp -v special
The character (raw) device.special
Specifies verbose mode.-v
137Quick Reference
Identifying file system types