- I went out and grabbed real versions of all of the RPMs for the tools
that were replaced. I forced those to install overtop of the cracked
ones. That worked...until some process re-copied the bogus ones on top
again.
Install the RPM's into an alternate dir and run them. This will allow you to look at your system and not have them replaced by a process or user. Make sure you explicitly use/call the newly installed RPM's.
ie: /usr/local/misc/ls /usr/local/misc/w
