On Sat, Nov 13, 2010 at 11:10 AM, Raman.P <[email protected]> wrote:
> --- On Sat, 13/11/10, ராஜ பாண்டி <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Sorry the file name is test.tmpl only
>> ls -l output
>>
>> -?????????  ? ?       ?       ?              ?  test..tmpl
>
> From the above it is clear that your file system has some corruption. You may 
> try seting ownership and permssion to this file, though I am doubtful about 
> its use. Also note that the file name is test..tmp and not test.tmpl as you 
> think.
>
> I pretty much doubt if anything useful can be attempted at this stage. Why 
> did you run fsck earlier?
>

I think stale NFS is a very common case when  network outage or some
such thing cause.

You can get rid of it by unmounting it forcibly(-f flag to mount) and
then remounting it.

NFS has always had problems.

Version 3 is better (even version 4 exists) and you can experiment with it.

Normally NFS mounted file systems are not fscked, hence the /etc/fstab
entries 0 0 meaning that you cannot fsck them.

-Girish


-- 
Gayatri Hitech

http://gayatri-hitech.com
[email protected]
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