HP CIFS Client A.02.02.03 Administrator's Guide
-s <separator> Sets string used to separate table entries (recognized only when used with
-r).
Sample cifslist Output
This section provides examples of cifslist output including the options, -x, -u and -m.
cifslist
The sample output of the cifslist command is shown as follows:
$ cifslist
Mounted Object Mountpoint State
-------------------------------------------------------------
\\er721142\pub /mnt/cifs_linux/00 M
\\er721141\pub /mnt/cifs_nt/00 M
\\hpntc43\pub /mnt/cifs_nt/01 MS
=============================================================
Server Local User Remote User Domain State
--------------------------------------------------------------
er721141 root cifsuser L
er721142 root john L
hpntc43 root cifsuser WORKGROUP LS
In the above exmaple, the cifslist command without any option displays servers with shares
and mountpoints information, it uses the \\server\share format for mounted objects.
The following is explanation of State symbols in the output of cifslist:
For mounts:
M = Mounted
S = Saved in mount database
R = Read only
For users:
L = Logged in
S = Saved in user database
cifslist —x
The following is a sample output of the cifslist -x command:
$ cifslist -x
Mounted Object Mountpoint State
-------------------------------------------------------------
er721142:/pub /mnt/cifs_linux/00 M
er721141:/pub /mnt/cifs_nt/00 M
hpntc43:/pub /mnt/cifs_nt/01 MS
=============================================================
Server Local User Remote User Domain State
--------------------------------------------------------------
er721141 root cifsuser L
er721142 root john L
hpntc43 root cifsuser WORKGROUP LS
In the above exmaple, HP CIFS Client displays servers with shares and mountpoints information,
it uses the UNIX format: server:/share for mounted objects.
cifslist —u
The following is an example output for the cifslist -u command:
$ cifslist -u
Server Local User Remote User Domain State
-------------------------------------------------------------
er721141 root cifsuser L
40 Commandline Utilities