> Linux enigma: > I recently tried to install SuSE linux on a workstation that does not boot > from CDROM. There is a suse utility that writes installation files to a > windows HD but alas suse could not install and put on Debian. HOWEVER! the > suse installation utility created several directories that I cannot > remove. In the windows partition of this machine, I have a linux directory > where suse created a suse directory and a setup directory therein > (windows/linux/suse/setup - when viewed from the now installed debian > partition). Inside of the setup directory is an entity called '/linux' that > I have tried to delete with rm and rmdir and get an error message: > > rm: cannot remove '/linux': No such file or directory > rmdir: '/linux': No such file or directory
I'm really confused. Why is this /linux and not /windows/linux/suse/setup/linux since you said you see the full name of the setup file from debian? > when I try to access this entity with Midnight Commander (my trusted friend > from MSDOS days) I get the following message > > File '/linux' exists but can not be stat-ed: No such file or directory. OK, so /linux does exist, is it a hard/soft link? Possibly a broken soft link? But then rm should work. What am I missing? What exactly is /linux? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]