Veritas Storage Foundation™ for Oracle 5.0.1 Administrator's Guide

Reorganizes extents. Files are reorganized to have the minimum
number of extents.
Note: If you specify -d and -e, directory reorganization is always
completed first.
-e
Produces reports on directory and extent fragmentation, respectively.
Note: If you use both -D and -E with the -d and -e options, the
fragmentation reports are produced both before and after
reorganization.
-D -E
Specifies verbose mode and reports reorganization activity.-v
Specifies the size of a file that is considered large. The default is 64
blocks.
-l
Specifies a maximum length of time to run, in seconds.
Note: The -t and -p options control the amount of work performed
by fsadm, either in a specified time or by a number of passes. By
default, fsadm runs five passes. If both -t and -p are specified, fsadm
exits if either of the terminating conditions are reached.
-t
Specifies a maximum number of passes to run. The default is five.
Note: The -t and -p options control the amount of work performed
by fsadm, either in a specified time or by a number of passes. By
default, fsadm runs five passes. If both -t and -p are specified, fsadm
exits if either of the terminating conditions are reached.
-p
Prints a summary of activity at the end of each pass.-s
Specifies the pathname of the raw device to read to determine file
layout and fragmentation. This option is used when fsadm cannot
determine the raw device.
-r
Note: You must have superuser (root) privileges to reorganize a file system using
the fsadm command.
63Setting up databases
About fragmentation