Hi Peter,

On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 09:09:17PM +0100, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
| [Thu Nov 17 21:00:39] peter@skapet:~$ doas ls -lS /dev/ | head
| total 2301984
| -rw-r--r--  1 root   wheel       1178386432 Oct 27  2015 sd0
| -r-xr-xr-x  1 root   wheel            11584 Nov 17 07:36 MAKEDEV
| dr-xr-xr-x  2 root   wheel             1024 Nov 17 18:01 fd
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                9 Aug  1  2014 audioctl -> audioctl0
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                6 Aug  1  2014 audio -> audio0
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                6 Aug  1  2014 mixer -> mixer0
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                6 Aug  1  2014 radio -> radio0
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                6 Aug  1  2014 sound -> sound0
| lrwxr-xr-x  1 root   wheel                6 Aug  1  2014 video -> video0
| [Thu Nov 17 21:00:49] peter@skapet:~$ 
| 
| and 
| 
| [Thu Nov 17 21:01:34] peter@skapet:~$ file /dev/sd0
| /dev/sd0: ISO 9660 CD-ROM filesystem data 'Ubuntu 15.10 amd64             ' 
(bootable) x86 boot sector; partition 2: ID=0xef, starthead 254, startsector 
2279532, 4544 sectors
| 
| so a device had indeed been replaced by a regular file.

No, the /dev/sd0 device doesn't exist anywhere.  If you want the full
device, use /dev/sd0c.

No, I never had that happen to one of my machines .. why do you ask?

Cheers,

Paul 'WEiRD' de Weerd

-- 
>++++++++[<++++++++++>-]<+++++++.>+++[<------>-]<.>+++[<+
+++++++++++>-]<.>++[<------------>-]<+.--------------.[-]
                 http://www.weirdnet.nl/                 

Reply via email to