Shouldn't it be a symbolic link: ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d /etc/rc.d because hard links cannot link to directories? mk
From: Jeffrey Taylor <jeff.taylor@ieee.org> To: suse-linux-e@suse.com Subject: Re: [SLE] 7.1 and VMware Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 18:23:52 -0600
I created a link "ln /etc/rc.d/init.d /etc/rc.d" and answered /etc/rc.d.
HTH, Jeffrey
Quoting Purple Shirt <purpleshirt@hotmail.com>:
I was just gonna try VMware. I downloaded the compressed tar version 2.0.3 for Linux hosts.
You can't get it to install under 7.1.
The question of their perl install script:
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc/init.d
The path "/etc/init.d" is a directory which does not contain a init.d directory.
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc
The path "/etc" is a directory which does not contain a rc0.d directory.
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)?
The answer always fails. =(
mk
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Yes it should be a symbolic link. I can't read directory listing right on the first try, sigh. Jeffrey Quoting Purple Shirt <purpleshirt@hotmail.com>:
Shouldn't it be a symbolic link:
ln -s /etc/rc.d/init.d /etc/rc.d
because hard links cannot link to directories?
mk
From: Jeffrey Taylor <jeff.taylor@ieee.org> To: suse-linux-e@suse.com Subject: Re: [SLE] 7.1 and VMware Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001 18:23:52 -0600
I created a link "ln /etc/rc.d/init.d /etc/rc.d" and answered /etc/rc.d.
HTH, Jeffrey
Quoting Purple Shirt <purpleshirt@hotmail.com>:
I was just gonna try VMware. I downloaded the compressed tar version 2.0.3 for Linux hosts.
You can't get it to install under 7.1.
The question of their perl install script:
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc/init.d
The path "/etc/init.d" is a directory which does not contain a init.d directory.
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)? /etc
The path "/etc" is a directory which does not contain a rc0.d directory.
What is the directory under which the init scripts reside (it should contain init.d/, and from rc0.d/ to rc6.d/)?
The answer always fails. =(
mk
_________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
_________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com
-- I don't do Windows and I don't come to work before nine. -- Johnny Paycheck
participants (2)
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Jeffrey Taylor
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Purple Shirt