The key is: What directory are you running mksles9root in? i.e. where is it 
trying to build the mksles9root directory? If you're trying to create it in the 
same place, then it will complain; If you try to do it in another place, you 
may have better luck.


--
Robert P. Nix           Mayo Foundation
RO-CE-8-857             200 First Street SW
507-284-0844            Rochester, MN 55905
-----
"In theory, theory and practice are the same, but
 in practice, theory and practice are different."

-----Original Message-----
From: Linux on 390 Port [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Tom Duerbusch
Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2005 10:12 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: mksles9root question

Is that if you do your own or if you use mksles9root?

I'm using mksles9root.  It makes the directories.  I had the s390
versions out there.  It wanted me to remove them so it could create the
s390x (not the author of the code, so I don't know why).

Since there didn't seem to be a command switch, I thought there might
be a "change this piece of code" to do what I want.

I guess the way the current mksles9root works is that you rebuild from
the iso images each time you want to switch from 31 bit to 64 bit and
back.

That might make some sort of sense if the iso images may be refreshed
by some offline or unattended process.  But it still takes a while to
setup.

Tom Duerbusch
THD Consulting

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