Hola~ >-- On Thu, Feb 17, 2000 at 05:14:45PM +0100, % wrote: > On Wed, Feb 16, 2000 at 16:00:06 -0800, Michael Kevin O'Brien wrote: > > I'm not saying removing libc6 was a smart idea. I want to know what to do > > to get my machine back? I've got a boot floppy that I'm hoping works (it's > > at home and I'm at work as I type this). Assuming I can boot the machine, > > is it possible to recover to a point where I can install the latest > > version of libc6??? > > Assuming the .deb of libc6 is still on your system (in > /var/cache/apt/archives/), you might try booting from your rescue disk, > switch to VC2 where you have a shell, mount your regular filesystem(s) under > /mnt and try something like
How does one boot from the rescue disk? I stick the rescue disk in the drive, turn on the machine. At the rescue prompt: I'm unable to switch to vc2. rescue root=/dev/fd0 (w/ rescue floppy still in drive) does some work; get to a "VFS: Insert root floppy and press ENTER" just pressing enter (leaving the rescue floppy in the drive): Unable to open an initial console. putting in a disk made with make zDisk: Kernel panic: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on 02:00 So, is there a way to actually get to a login shell using only the rescue disk??? MO > dpkg-deb --x /mnt/var/cache/apt/archives/libc6*deb /mnt > ldconfig -r /mnt > and then try booting to it. If it works, install the .deb again, this time > using dpkg, so that your package database becomes consistent again. > > HTH, > Ray > -- > Obsig: developing a new sig -- Michael O'Brien [EMAIL PROTECTED] Alias|Wavefront 206.287.5634 Polygonist "This will not look good on a resume." -Robin Williams