Re: How to fsck a disk

2003-03-06 Thread Graeme Jensen
> On Tue, Mar 04, 2003 at 07:27:01PM -0800, Saqib Ali wrote: > > fsck {/file/system} > > > > replace {/file/system}, with the file system that you want to repair. > actually you should run: fsck -y {/file/system} Thanks for the help, but I'm not sure which file system I should repair. As for the

Re: How to fsck a disk

2003-03-05 Thread Aaron Konstam
On Tue, Mar 04, 2003 at 07:27:01PM -0800, Saqib Ali wrote: > fsck {/file/system} > > replace {/file/system}, with the file system that you want to repair. actually you should run: fsck -y {/file/system} > > > On Wed, 5 Mar 2003, Graeme Jensen wrote: > > > After upgrading some packages using the

Re: How to fsck a disk

2003-03-04 Thread Saqib Ali
fsck {/file/system} replace {/file/system}, with the file system that you want to repair. On Wed, 5 Mar 2003, Graeme Jensen wrote: > After upgrading some packages using the red hat up2date command, it seems I > have somehow damaged the files and now I cannot log into my RH8.0 box. I > get an e