Fellow SuSE users- I have a server running a minimal install of OpenSuSE 10.1. In the /opt directory there was a gnome subdirectory. When trying to delete a different subdirectory under /opt I accidentally killed this one too (/opt/gnome):). Now yast2 refuses to run and gives this error: You need to install yast2-ncurses to use the YaST2 text mode interface So I reinstalled the yast2-ncurses and ncurses rpms but that doesn't seem to fix it. Anyone else have a minimal install of SuSE 10.1 and can look in /opt/gnome to see what I may have killed? thanks.
Matt Standish skrev:
Fellow SuSE users- I have a server running a minimal install of OpenSuSE 10.1. In the /opt directory there was a gnome subdirectory. When trying to delete a different subdirectory under /opt I accidentally killed this one too (/opt/gnome):). Now yast2 refuses to run and gives this error:
You need to install yast2-ncurses to use the YaST2 text mode interface
So I reinstalled the yast2-ncurses and ncurses rpms but that doesn't seem to fix it. Anyone else have a minimal install of SuSE 10.1 and can look in /opt/gnome to see what I may have killed? thanks.
Matt, the attached file is a complete list of my /opt dir. My system is a dual Opteron (x86_64) installation, but I doubt package and file names would be any different. -- Anders Norrbring Norrbring Consulting
Anders Norrbring wrote:
Matt Standish skrev:
Fellow SuSE users- I have a server running a minimal install of OpenSuSE 10.1. In the /opt directory there was a gnome subdirectory. When trying to delete a different subdirectory under /opt I accidentally killed this one too (/opt/gnome):). Now yast2 refuses to run and gives this error:
You need to install yast2-ncurses to use the YaST2 text mode interface
So I reinstalled the yast2-ncurses and ncurses rpms but that doesn't seem to fix it. Anyone else have a minimal install of SuSE 10.1 and can look in /opt/gnome to see what I may have killed? thanks.
Matt, the attached file is a complete list of my /opt dir. My system is a dual Opteron (x86_64) installation, but I doubt package and file names would be any different.
Thanks, I just did this: (FYI) #!/bin/bash for each in $(rpm -qa); do echo $each: rpm -ql $each |grep '/opt' done; Then copied the rpm names to a file and then did this: #!/bin/bash for each in $(cat filelist); do rpm -UFvh --force ftp://chuck.ucs.indiana.edu/linux/opensuse/distribution/SL-10.1/inst-source/suse/i586/$each.i586.rpm done;
participants (2)
-
Anders Norrbring
-
Matt Standish