\fB[--recursive|-r] <dirname|filename>\fR
.br
To list the striping information for a given filename or directory. By default the stripe count, size, and offset will be returned. If you only want specific striping information then the options of \fB--count\fR,\fB--size\fR,\fB--index\fR or \fB--offset\fR plus various combinations of these options can be used to retrieve only what you want. What pools a file belong to can also be obtained with \fB--pool\fR. In the case where you only want details about the files object id information then the \fB--quiet\fR option is used. Additional information available about striping can be displayed with \fB--verbose\fR. The default behavior of lfs getstripe used to retrieve data about a directory is to list all the contents of that directory. If you wish to inquire only about that directory then \fB--directory\fR,can be used to list directory entries instead of its contents in the same manner as ls -d. This can be expanded with \fB--recursive\fR which will recurse into all subdirectories. You can filter the search to return only files that has a object on a specific OST with \fB--obd\fR.
.TP
\fB[--recursive|-r] <dirname|filename>\fR
.br
To list the striping information for a given filename or directory. By default the stripe count, size, and offset will be returned. If you only want specific striping information then the options of \fB--count\fR,\fB--size\fR,\fB--index\fR or \fB--offset\fR plus various combinations of these options can be used to retrieve only what you want. What pools a file belong to can also be obtained with \fB--pool\fR. In the case where you only want details about the files object id information then the \fB--quiet\fR option is used. Additional information available about striping can be displayed with \fB--verbose\fR. The default behavior of lfs getstripe used to retrieve data about a directory is to list all the contents of that directory. If you wish to inquire only about that directory then \fB--directory\fR,can be used to list directory entries instead of its contents in the same manner as ls -d. This can be expanded with \fB--recursive\fR which will recurse into all subdirectories. You can filter the search to return only files that has a object on a specific OST with \fB--obd\fR.
.TP