On Wed, 12 Mar 2003 13:09:50 -0500 (EST)
Reid Mumford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I have a problem that has brought my laptop down.
> 
> Any ideas on how to save this system without having to reinstall?


Your filesystem was corrupted and you've lost some files (or pieces of files).

You may be able to get back to a semblance of a working system, but even
if you do, there's no way for you to know what other filesystem
corruption is waiting to bite you.

Your safest bet for the long term is to back up any data you want to save and 
reinstall the system.

I've developed some shortcuts which you may find useful:

1. On a blank floppy, make a mini-etc file tree, and copy into it the
configuration files in /etc/ you've changed from the defaults. You may also wish to 
save some files from your home directory, like .bashrc if you've changed it from 
defaults.

2. Do "dpkg --get-selections" and redirect the results to a file on the floppy. I use 
/floppy/debs.installed.

3. When you reinstall, install only the base system.

4. When you log in after reinstallation, mount the floppy and do "dpkg
--set-selections</floppy/debs.installed to tell the system which packages you want to 
have on the system.

5. Do "apt-get dselect-upgrade" to get and install the packages.

6. Copy your configuration files from the floppy to the hard drive,  overwriting the 
defaults.

When you reinstall, using a filesystem type other than ext2 will reduce the chance 
you'll need to do this again. Others with experience of different filesystem types may 
wish to chime in here. I use JFS, but I'm considering changing to ReiserFS.

Kevin


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