Re: [SLE] half of the solution, was where is the guru
Constant sorry the directory you should do an ls -l is /mnt/sbin NOT /sbin I made a typo error.
Another thing before mounting the /dev/hdc4 filesystem do:
fsck -y /dev/hdc4
Keep the faith...;-)
As it is a reiser system I did reiserfsck -l check.log /dev/hdc4 and got some interesting information. Cannot find the log file ;-) and because my find gives me a guaranteed reboot (?) I will just tell what I remember. It said Bad nodes were found and a free block count 189861 (wrote that down ;-)) mismatches with a correct one 197678. 7817 bits. Can be only corrected with --rebuild-tree. I read the man page for reiserfsck, did not make a backup ;-) as suggested and corrected my permission denied with reiserfsck -l rebuild.log (where should I find that file?) --rebuild-tree /dev/hdc4. In my lost&found I find some twenty SuSEconf files. In /sbin/conf.d only SuSEconf.postfix. I am happy that I can install postfix again but I cannot find *postfix in /sbin where it should be and I did nowher find the command *SuSEconf I am still not complete but the situation is improving. Using Yast2 for installing I found that the SuSEconfig part is finished far too fast so I need some expert help. How to complete my system? -- NTReader v0.36w(P)/Beta (Registered) in conjunction with Net-Tamer.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday 12 November 2002 09:27, Constant Brouerius van Nidek wrote:
As it is a reiser system I did reiserfsck -l check.log /dev/hdc4 and got some interesting information. Cannot find the log file ;-) and because my find gives me a guaranteed reboot (?) I will just tell what I remember. It said Bad nodes were found and a free block count 189861 (wrote that down ;-)) mismatches with a correct one 197678. 7817 bits. Can be only corrected with --rebuild-tree. I read the man page for reiserfsck, did not make a backup ;-) as suggested and corrected my permission denied with reiserfsck -l rebuild.log (where should I find that file?) --rebuild-tree /dev/hdc4. REPLY: Have you looked on /var/log/
In my lost&found I find some
twenty SuSEconf files. REPLY: lost +found is the standard place where th fsck or fsck related tools will put recovered dat after a disk error (your case).
In /sbin/conf.d only SuSEconf.postfix.
I am happy that I can install postfix again but I cannot find *postfix in /sbin where it should be and I did nowher find the command *SuSEconf Reply: Can you be a bit more explicit, Which postix do you refer to? there are many files and directories when postix is installed and you can even install it manually without the need for the SuSEconf. Or the Use of the SuSE graphical Interface.
Regards Victor: - -- There are no problems only solutions to be found... - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NetSystems Info Inc. 164 rue Ideal St-Eustache, Quebec J7P !R3, CANADA -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE90UGv3GpaTL3AppcRAtT1AJ9FMigskRqyiXd8reuyVprehWFq5gCeNCsF bmVBEmXENBzIQN26qfXBvA4= =U5A4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
The 02.11.12 at 21:27, Constant Brouerius van Nidek wrote:
file?) --rebuild-tree /dev/hdc4. In my lost&found I find some twenty SuSEconf files. In /sbin/conf.d only SuSEconf.postfix. I am happy that I can install postfix again but I cannot find *postfix in /sbin where it should be
No, it resides in /usr/sbin. Pacakge postfix.
and I did nowher find the command *SuSEconf
nimrodel:~ # rpm -q -f /sbin/SuSEconfig aaa_base-2002.9.12-1
I am still not complete but the situation is improving. Using Yast2 for installing I found that the SuSEconfig part is finished far too fast so I need some expert help. How to complete my system?
You can find which package has which file using the search button in yast, and so install whatever is missing - grumbs, I'll eat my words: it seems some of the /etc/sysconfig files are "not owned by any package." Ideas... if you have enough disk space available, install another partition with another "linux", with fewer things (no apache, no staroffice, no howtos...). You can use it for emergencies or rescuing, and this time, for copying missing files from one to the other. I did that time ago O:-) -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson
participants (3)
-
Carlos E. R.
-
Constant Brouerius van Nidek
-
Victor Mendez