> > Probably wrong access rights on the directory. > > As root this shouldn't be a problem. But I thought about this. So I put 777 > on the dirs/files... as expected no luck.
Access rights wouldn't explain a 0-length file. If you don't have permission to write to the directory, it won't create any file. A 0-length file could be explained by a quota but root wouldn't ordinarily be bound by quotas. That could be worth a check. Also, if this is a remote-mounted directory, then root might not have root access to it. The file system's being full would be another possibility. If none of these things checks out and you don't get more useful diagnostics by running rundig with more "v"s, then try running rundig or the htdig command which it calls under a diagnostic program which displays sub-routine calls. For Solaris that would be truss. For earlier versions of SunOS, that would be trace. I don't know what it would be under HP Unix. Douglas ======== Douglas Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: Oracle 10g Get certified on the hottest thing ever to hit the market... Oracle 10g. Take an Oracle 10g class now, and we'll give you the exam FREE. http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id149&alloc_id�66&op=click _______________________________________________ ht://Dig general mailing list: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ht://Dig FAQ: http://htdig.sourceforge.net/FAQ.html List information (subscribe/unsubscribe, etc.) https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/htdig-general

