From: "Jack Stone" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CC: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Cannot delete stubborn files
Date: Sun, 04 Jun 2006 14:52:01 -0500
From: Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Jack Stone" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
CC: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Cannot delete stubborn files
Date: Sun, 4 Jun 2006 14:40:22 -0400
"Jack Stone" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >From: Chris Hill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >To: Jack Stone <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >CC: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> >Subject: Re: Cannot delete stubborn files
> >Date: Sun, 4 Jun 2006 09:39:51 -0400 (EDT)
> >
> >On Sun, 4 Jun 2006, Jack Stone wrote:
> >
> >>I have 2 files that resists all efforts to delete them.
> >
> >[...]
> >
> >>Here are the files and the error message:
> >>rm: local/lib/perl5/5.6.1/mach/Sys/Hostname.pm: Operation not
permitted
> >>rm: local/lib/perl5/5.6.1/mach/Sys/Syslog.pm: Operation not permitted
> >
> >Make sure the files do not have the system immutable flag set:
> >
> ># chflags noschg local/lib/perl5/5.6.1/mach/Sys/Hostname.pm
> ># chflags noschg local/lib/perl5/5.6.1/mach/Sys/Syslog.pm
> >
> >...and then see if you can't delete them. I don't know why the flag
would
> >be set, but it's something to try.
> >
> >HTH.
> >
> >--
> >Chris Hill [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Chris: Tried that at the very first. No joy!
If flags and permissions are all set so that the files should delete, and
they still don't, reboot the system into single user mode and fsck the
partition.
I had this happen a number of years ago. We had dirty power and the
system
would reboot on occasion during brownout. We finally got UPS on the
system,
but months later we had files that wouldn't delete. The only way we
finally
got rid of them was to reboot in single user and fsck. I expect the disk
suffered some subtle corruption during an unclean boot and it took time
before we noticed.
Another option would be to use fstat to make sure nothing has the files
open.
HTH.
--
Bill Moran
Hi, Bill: Yes, tried all of that before and again no joy -- very mysteries.
A free cigar to anyone who solves this one!
Since I learned I could "mv" the directory that contains the 2 files, I
tried to move it to another partition, figuring I had a solution IF I could
only do that.
Here's the new error when I tried to move the directory from "/" to /usr
mv: /bin/rm: terminated with 1 (non-zero) status: Cross-device link
Does this new hint stike any bells?
THX
Jack
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