On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 03:55:18PM +0200, Julio Merino wrote: > On Thu, Sep 14, 2000 at 04:28:07AM -0800, Ethan Benson wrote: > > > you have experienced fairly severe filesystem corruption, cleaning up > > after such things is generally a nightmare. did you run fsck i > > presume? (fsck a four letter word for a reason...) > > Yes; fsck was run, and after a lot of time checking the filesystem and > complaining about bad inodes and such things, it got me to bash and > said... Please run fsck manually. > I saw this other times in the past, but I was able to repair the > filesystem.
is the filesystem usually a mess afterwords? ie with files ending up in /lost+found, directories lost, things transformed into symlinks et al. or am i doing something wrong when i use fsck ;-) > I could say yes. A dying disk can erase data and corrupt files. I > remember I saw a 500 mb disk in a new computer that when it was about > 50% full, it started corrupting everything... The disk also become a > 1000 GB disk magically ;-) and files in one directory were bigger than > this. how nice.. im pretty sure this has to be a dying disk, this morning i had a huge email from logcheck full of all kinds of nasty read errors, block errors and inode errors, all occuring right about 6:25 and 6:30 (cron, lots of disk activity etc) so ordering a new disk and hope i can make it work in the older system (with broken BIOS and such) > Oh, I think I never used dselect... I don't like it very much. I > always start installing the base system and then the base packages > that are selected by the system without selecting any task. Then, I > add packages -on demand-. When I need one, I use apt to install it. this is really the way to do it i think, though its annoying to the impatient (and to other users you may have that don't have root..) -- Ethan Benson http://www.alaska.net/~erbenson/
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