On Wed Dec 5 13:45:00 2001 Shri Shrikumar wrote... > >On Wed, 2001-12-05 at 18:19, Stan Brown wrote: >> Somehow I have installed something on the machine at work that spits out an >> erro meesgae about every 5 minutes about an I/O error on the floppy (which >> I NEVER use). > >Find out if your floppy drive is mounted by using just > >mount > Nope, the floppy is not mounted.
> >df would also show an error if there was some problem accessing the >device. if there is an error on any device - just try umounting it and >using umount -f (as root) if necessary. > >> I've posted about this twice in the last week or so, but never goy any >> useful answers. So this morning I wnet through dselect trying to compare >> packages between teh machines, I dleted a few packages on the machine at >> work in an effort to get rid of this (since it make using the console >> impossible). Now it's worse! Now in addiation to that error I'm geting >> "cdrom: open failed" > >Do you use cdrom sources with apt - if so, you might want to switch that >off. check your fstab to see if the cdrom or floppy are mounted >automatically (they probably shouldn't be and there should be noauto in >their options) Niehter one is in fstab. I installed over the network, and have never put cdrom in the apt-get souces lisiting. > >With regards to access to console, Have you tried switching to another >console like tty2 - tty6 to see if the messages show up there as well. Right, they show up on hte one you are using :-(. If I leave something runing in one and switch away from it, it's disply remians OK. if I run something, and stay on that one, it get messed up. > >Also, if you ssh in, the messages should not show up. this should make >troubleshooting easier. True if I work from another machine, they don't show up. > Thanks. -- Stan Brown [EMAIL PROTECTED] 843-745-3154 Charleston SC. -- Windows 98: n. useless extension to a minor patch release for 32-bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit company that can't stand for 1 bit of competition. - (c) 2000 Stan Brown. Redistribution via the Microsoft Network is prohibited.