Thanks; I had never set or changed any flags until a few days ago, in trying to 'fix' this issue. Perhaps someone compromised the system via FTP (ftpd was running only anonymously), or via HTTP.
* * The most dangerous man, to any government, is the man who is able to think things out for himself, without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. --Mencken --- On Sun, 9/7/08, Philip Guenther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: From: Philip Guenther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Re: Stop in line 73 of Makefile To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: "Misc OpenBSD" <misc@openbsd.org> Date: Sunday, September 7, 2008, 12:32 PM On Sun, Sep 7, 2008 at 9:18 AM, Doug Milam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Performing 'make build' as root...there is no 'schg' flag on /bin/chgrp > > ===> bin/chmod > install -c -s -o root -g bin -m 555 chmod /bin/chmod > strip: Bad address Umm, that's not an expected error from 'strip' during install. Your system appears to suffer all sorts of oddball failures. > rm: /bin/chgrp: Operation not permitted unlink("/bin/chgrp") is returning EPERM. Either you're installing to an unusual file system, or the /bin/chgrp file has flags set (you say no schg, but what about uchg, uappnd, or sappnd?), or your rm binary is broken/hacked, or your running kernel is broken/hacked. IMHO, the only way to be sure you have a good system at this point is to reinstall from scratch via an actual CD. You never said whether you found who had used the chflags command on /bsd. If the answer was "don't know who", then consider that you're running a system that has had root-level changes made that you can't explain and therefore can't trust, and then ask yourself why you *haven't* already reinstalled from a CD. Philip Guenther