Linux-Setup Digest #743, Volume #20               Sat, 3 Mar 01 12:13:11 EST

Contents:
  Re: LILO Hangs at 'L' (Anita Lewis)
  Re: How to copy existing linux installation to another hdd? ("Peter T. Breuer")
  Re: LILO Hangs at 'L' ("Alexis M")
  Re: How do I apply a kernel patch? (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Rasmus_B=F8g_Hansen?=)
  Re: setting IP on hp network printer (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Rasmus_B=F8g_Hansen?=)
  Re: setting IP on hp network printer (Stefano Ghirlanda)
  Re: linux video problem (AI Nut)
  Do daemons corrupt system security? (Erik Leunissen)
  Re: How do I apply a kernel patch? ("Gene Heskett")
  installing suse-linux problem ("Stephan M. Ott")
  Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ? ("david")
  Re: Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ? (Dean Thompson)
  Re: how to setup DDNS? ("THEHACKERS FEST")
  Re: Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ? (Rick Matthews)
  Re: http loopback taking 14 minutes ("D. Stimits")
  SOLVED: ip on hp network printer (Stefano Ghirlanda)
  Kernel Panic, or hang off boot disk... ("Terry Denbo")

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Anita Lewis)
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.install,linux.redhat.misc
Subject: Re: LILO Hangs at 'L'
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 10:25:32 GMT

On Sat, 3 Mar 2001 06:03:23 -0000, Alexis M wrote:
>I just setup Redhat 7.0 on an ancient machine (AMD 400)  I found in my
>closet. I installed Linux on /dev/hdb, i.e. Primary Slave hard drive.
>
>There is no primary master, there is something wrong with my motherboard,
>and I can only slave drives work (Primary slave is my HD, Secondary slave is
>my CD-ROM).
>
>The system boots fine from floppy, but when I try to boot from the HD, LILO
>hangs on the letter "L". When I ran /sbin/lilo, I got a message saying:
>"Warning: /dev/hdb is not on the first disk". I know the HD can boot from
>primary slave, since I used to have Windoze 98 on the PC.
>
>Is there any way to get this to work? I've tried disabling all boot devices
>in my BIOS, and also disabled Virus protection in BIOS.
>
>My lilo.conf reads:
>
>boot=/dev/hdb
>map=/boot/map
>install=/boot/boot.b
>prompt
>timeout=50
>message=/boot/message
>linear
>default=linux
>
>image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.2.16.mine
>        label=linux
>        read-only
>        root=/dev/hdb1
>
>If you've read this far, thanks!!! Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>
>Alexis M

The advice in the other post is good.  You might also need to change
'linear' above to 'lba32' and run '/sbin/lilo' if you have your partition
above 1023.

Anita


------------------------------

From: "Peter T. Breuer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How to copy existing linux installation to another hdd?
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.help
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 10:36:30 GMT

In comp.os.linux.help Dmitri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Big thanks for manuals for cp and tar command, but I think that there
> is also present a boot records... Of course I can copy all, but what

Which obviously you will have to make, since it is different for your
new disk. That was the whole point of your question, if I recall rightly!
Run /sbin/lilo after installation (you will also have to edit
/etc/fstab and set up the IP address and hostname for your new
machine).

> about /proc, /dev directories, do I need to copy them? How to make new

/proc is not a directory, It is a different filesystem, and a virtual
one at that. /dev is a directory and it copies perfectly normally
with the flags you ahve been given.

(please QUOTE what you are referring to in previdous messages when you post).

> hdd bootable same as old?

By doing it. Do whatever you did last time!

Peter

------------------------------

From: "Alexis M" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.install,linux.redhat.misc
Subject: Re: LILO Hangs at 'L'
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 11:26:58 -0000

Thanks... both tips worked like a charm...

Alexis M

< a l e x _ m 7 4   at   h o t m a i l   dot   c o m >


"Anita Lewis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:wE3o6.3126$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> On Sat, 3 Mar 2001 06:03:23 -0000, Alexis M wrote:
> >I just setup Redhat 7.0 on an ancient machine (AMD 400)  I found in my
> >closet. I installed Linux on /dev/hdb, i.e. Primary Slave hard drive.
> >
> >There is no primary master, there is something wrong with my motherboard,
> >and I can only slave drives work (Primary slave is my HD, Secondary slave
is
> >my CD-ROM).
> >
> >The system boots fine from floppy, but when I try to boot from the HD,
LILO
> >hangs on the letter "L". When I ran /sbin/lilo, I got a message saying:
> >"Warning: /dev/hdb is not on the first disk". I know the HD can boot from
> >primary slave, since I used to have Windoze 98 on the PC.
> >
> >Is there any way to get this to work? I've tried disabling all boot
devices
> >in my BIOS, and also disabled Virus protection in BIOS.
> >
> >My lilo.conf reads:
> >
> >boot=/dev/hdb
> >map=/boot/map
> >install=/boot/boot.b
> >prompt
> >timeout=50
> >message=/boot/message
> >linear
> >default=linux
> >
> >image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.2.16.mine
> >        label=linux
> >        read-only
> >        root=/dev/hdb1
> >
> >If you've read this far, thanks!!! Any help would be greatly appreciated.
> >
> >Alexis M
>
> The advice in the other post is good.  You might also need to change
> 'linear' above to 'lba32' and run '/sbin/lilo' if you have your partition
> above 1023.
>
> Anita
>



------------------------------

From: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Rasmus_B=F8g_Hansen?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How do I apply a kernel patch?
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 13:04:53 +0100

On Sat, 3 Mar 2001, Pumpkinhead wrote:

> i have rh6.2 running 2.2.18 and wish to apply patch-2.2.18.gz.
>
> has anyone done this before?

Certainly not as it is not possible...

patch-2.2.18 is the patch, that upgrades 2.2.17 to 2.2.18. And as you
already have 2.2.18, you won't have much success...

Rasmus


------------------------------

From: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Rasmus_B=F8g_Hansen?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: setting IP on hp network printer
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 13:09:20 +0100

On 3 Mar 2001, Stefano Ghirlanda wrote:

> Omar Stoltzfus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Stefano Ghirlanda wrote:
> >
> > > Hi,
> > > I have bought a used hp4050n that was on another netowrk, and I need
> > > to reset IP and gateway addresses. I have tried the setup programs on
> > > the hp site but they do not work here (slackware 7.0) and do not
> > > provide any useful hint about why they are failing...
> > >
> > > Has anyone any info on how to do this?
> >
> > Use the printer controls to print a configuration page.  This should
> > list the ip address.  telnet to the ip address and then change the ip
> > address to whatever.  I think exit will save changes and quit doesn't.
> > BTW this only works if the 4050 is connected to a network.
>
> Thanks! But I have a problem with telnet because the wrong gateway is
> set on the printer so it cannot be reached... our local network is
> routed through a different gateway.
>
> Other suggestions?

Temporarily set a box on the same subnet as the printer, telnet to the
printer and set correct IP configuration on the printer and revert the
box' IP configuration to normal.

If you have a kernel with IP aliasing, you can even define an IP alias
for the same subnet as the printer - this way you can continue normal
network operation in the meantime...

Rasmus


------------------------------

From: Stefano Ghirlanda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: setting IP on hp network printer
Date: 03 Mar 2001 14:52:21 +0100

Rasmus B�g Hansen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> > Thanks! But I have a problem with telnet because the wrong gateway is
> > set on the printer so it cannot be reached... our local network is
> > routed through a different gateway.
> >
> > Other suggestions?
> 
> Temporarily set a box on the same subnet as the printer, telnet to the
> printer and set correct IP configuration on the printer and revert the
> box' IP configuration to normal.

Ok, we're getting closer... but this other subnet is in a building a
few hundred meters away. I *could* knock on their door with the
printer on my back and say: "Hi, can I just hook this up somewhere?"
but I would rather avoid it...

> If you have a kernel with IP aliasing, you can even define an IP alias
> for the same subnet as the printer - this way you can continue normal
> network operation in the meantime...

MY IP aliasing knowledge is 0. I will read the HOWTO. I want also try
to minimize disturbance to the network. Can I do something like
connecting the printer directly to the ethernet port of a machine that
is temporarily set to have the IP of the gateway the printer is set to
go through? And then telnet form the fake gateway...

Thanks for these ideas,

-- 
Stefano - Hodie quinto Nonas Martias MMI est

------------------------------

From: AI Nut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: linux video problem
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 08:09:22 -0600

Steve, that was indeed the problem.  Thank you!

AI Nut


Steve Martin wrote:
> 
> AI Nut wrote:
> 
> > This one is really strange.  I loaded Suse 6.2 on top of an old
> > Slackware installation.  Worked fine, lasted long time.  Loaded Suse
> > 6.3, everything ok.  Loaded 6.4 and now, boot proceeds correctly, even
> > down to "MachineName login:".  Then, within about a second, the screen
> > goes from legible text to completely illegible with dots and dashes in
> > stairstep effect at the top and bottom 1/4's of the screen and nothing I
> > do shows up correctly.
> 
> Sounds like maybe X is trying to start up in a mode that your monitor
> can't handle. When this wierdness happens, try hitting CTRL-ALT-F1
> to see if it gives you a legible text screen back. If so, that's
> what's happening.
> 
> If you can get a legible login screen, log in and see what the
> "initdefault" entry of /etc/inittab says. If it's got a "5" in
> it, that's where you're going astray. Edit that entry and change
> it back to "3", and your system should boot up in text mode once again.
> That'll let you get in and edit your XF86Config file to get rid of
> the bad X modes.
> 
> Hope this helps.

------------------------------

From: Erik Leunissen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: alt.os.linux,alt.os.linux.suse
Subject: Do daemons corrupt system security?
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 15:06:40 +0100

L.S.

I've got some software (which manages licenses for licensed software),
which consist of two daemons. The documentation of this software
repeatedly an strongly disencourages to run these daemons as user root
because - in general - doing so, constitutes a system security risk.

Encouraged by this warning, I've been checking all daemons that are
launched automatically at system boot by my Linux installation (SuSE
version 6.4). What do i find: THEY ALL RUN AS USER ROOT!

Not being very introduced to the subject of system security, I find this
peculiar. Either the licensing software vendor seems somewhat paranoia
about system security, or SuSE seems to be neglecting system security
offensively.

Anyway, I've got a very hard time trying to make the information
correspond.
Shouldn't I take the licensing software seriously, or should I adjust
the initialization scripts of all daemon processes that came with the
SuSE installation, with respect to the users they are run as? 

I'd appreciate it very much, if someone more knowledgeable about system
security issues, gave me some advice.


Thanks in advance,

Erik Leunissen.

--

Remove fake from the e-mail address to reply.


------------------------------

Date: 3 Mar 2001 7:42:55 -0500
From: "Gene Heskett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: How do I apply a kernel patch?

Gene Heskett sends Greetings to Bora Ugurlu;

 BU> David wrote:

>> Pumpkinhead wrote:
>>> 
>>> i have rh6.2 running 2.2.18 and wish to apply patch-2.2.18.gz.
>>> 
>>> has anyone done this before?
>>> 
>>> i go:
>>> 
>>> % cd /usr/src
>>> % patch -p0 < patch-2.2.18
>>> 
>>> and get something like:
>>> 
>>> previous reversed patch detected.  assume -R [n]
>>> 
>>> does anyone have any clue of what's happening?
>>> 
>>> peter
>> 
>> I think you need to unpack the patch and then.
>> 
>> cd /usr/src/linux
>> patch -p0 < /full/path/to/patch.diff
>> 

 BU> And then?

 BU> Recompile the kernel or what?

The patchfiles are ALWAYS made against the last major.minor number
of the kernel release.  This means that a patchfile called *2.4.2-ac10,
to use the latest one, is intended to be applied to a PRISTINE unpack of
the 2.4.2 release.  Its not very hard to write a bash script that does
all that for you, and then all you have to do is run 'make oldconfig'
etc.

The script looks like this, executed from /usr/src:
=======
#!/bin/bash
VER=2.4.2-ac10
cd /usr/src/linux
cp -f .config /var/.config
cp -f .config.old /var/.config.old
cp -f makeit /var/makeit
cd ..
rm -f linux
bunzip2 patch-$VER.bz2
tar xIvf /pub/dlds/linux-2.4.2.tar.bz2
mv linux linux-$VER
ln -s linux-$VER linux
cd linux
patch -p1 <../patch-$VER
mv /var/.config .
mv /var/.config.old .
mv /var/makeit .
========

Edit the paths and VER to suit.

Note that I also saved another script called 'makeit', which is a
similarly written script that does the compile, and in pseudocode it
does:

sets its VER
make dep
make bzImage
copy's the bzImage to /boot/vmlinuz-$VER
make modules
removes any /lib/modules/VER.old directories
moves the old /lib/modules/VER to VER.old
make modules_install
rm's the link from the current /boot/System.map
installs a new /boot/System.map-VER
links /boot/System.map-VER to /boot/System.map
depmod -a $VER
/sbin/lilo -v

This assumes you have edited /etc/lilo.conf to add the new kernel by the
time it gets around to running lilo.

My script is longer than that as it steps out of the linux dir and
rebuilds the sensors stuffs too, but thats the general outline.
I would have copied them over directly and included them, but it appears
that 2.4.2-ac10 has managed to kill samba, or this amiga needs a reboot.

You of course are responsible for properly setting the compile up with
the make oldconfig, make xconfig sequence.  I find I have to tell
xconfig that my system clock keeps time in UTC everytime, seems a make
oldconfig doesn't detect that properly and resets it to localtime.

Cheers, Gene
-- 
  Gene Heskett, CET, UHK       |Amiga A2k Zeus040, Linux @ 500mhz 
        email gene underscore heskett at iolinc dot net
#Amiga based X10 home automation program EZHome, see at:#
 <http://www.thirdwave.net/~jimlucia/amigahomeauto>
This messages reply content, but not any previously quoted material,
is � 2001 by Gene Heskett, all rights reserved.
-- 


------------------------------

From: "Stephan M. Ott" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: installing suse-linux problem
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 15:42:11 +0100

Hi folks,
as my linux-server doesn't have a cdrom I did installation with ftp from
another computer with cdrom.
everything is fine, except for one thing: I can't install any kernel ! when
trying to select a kernel to install, the system connects to the ftp-server,
accesses the cdrom but can't find any kernels. so, how can I install a
kernel on my system ? (the other server has ide-hdds, but the new one
scsi.-hdds, so I can't use the kernel from the other server)

any help is greatly appreciated...

thanks in advance.

--- Stephan





------------------------------

From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ?
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 23:30:09 +0800

I want to use my Linux PC as an internet gateway. How can I enable IP
Forwarding, Masquerading, etc so that other Win PCs are able to access
internet via this Linux PC.

The Linux PC is already able to connect to internet.



------------------------------

From: Dean Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Re: Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ?
Date: Sun, 04 Mar 2001 02:39:59 +1100


Hi David,

> I want to use my Linux PC as an internet gateway. How can I enable IP
> Forwarding, Masquerading, etc so that other Win PCs are able to access
> internet via this Linux PC.
> 
> The Linux PC is already able to connect to internet.

If you are looking to get traffic moved from one NIC to another, you might
like to take a look at the following files (if they exist):

/etc/sysctl.conf
# Disables packet forwarding
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1 -------------->  Change this to the number 1
[...]
# Disables automatic defragmentation (needed for masquerading, LVS)
net.ipv4.ip_always_defrag = 1 -------->  Change this to the number 1

Additionally, you may want to take a look in the following file as well:
/etc/sysconfig/network
FORWARD_IPV4=true -------------------->  Change this to true

Finally, you can do the following in a script as well:
echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_always_defrag

This should get traffic flowing between your interfaces.

Additionally, you will need to use ipchains to get your IPMASQ'ing running
unless you are using a firewall tool such as PMfirewall which seems to build
these rules automatically for you.

To find out more information about that part, take a look at
http://www.linuxdoc.org (especially the HOWTO's on IPCHAINS-HOWTO and
Mini-Networking HOWTO.

See ya & Good Luck

Dean Thompson

--
+______________________________+____________________________________________+
|   Dean Thompson              | E-mail  - [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
|   Bach. Computing (Hons)     | ICQ     - 45191180                         |
|   PhD Student                | Office  - <Off-Campus>                     |
|   School Comp.Sci & Soft.Eng | Phone   - +61 3 9903 2787 (Gen. Office)    |
|   MONASH (Caulfield Campus)  | Fax     - +61 3 9903 1077                  |
|   Melbourne, Australia       |                                            |
+------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+

------------------------------

From: "THEHACKERS FEST" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: 
alt.comp.linux,comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.admin,comp.os.linux.networking,comp.os.linux.questions,comp.os.linux.redhat
Subject: Re: how to setup DDNS?
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 16:06:38 -0000

What is DDNS ;) ?? do you mean DNS by any chance ;)


"tin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:3aa0098c$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> may i know how to setup DDNS  in my office bind server?
> I using RH 7.0
>
> i want to update my win2k and win98 client IP
>
> i want to dynamic update from my home computer
>
> thx
>
>
>


------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.networking
Subject: Re: Enable IP Forwarding, Masquerading ?
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Rick Matthews)
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 16:41:07 GMT

david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>I want to use my Linux PC as an internet gateway. How can I enable IP
>Forwarding, Masquerading, etc so that other Win PCs are able to access
>internet via this Linux PC.
>
>The Linux PC is already able to connect to internet.
>

http://www.linux-firewall-tools.com/linux/

http://www.linux-firewall-tools.com/linux/firewall/index.html

-- 
Thought for the day:
<http://mysite.directlink.net/matthews/smiles/started.htm>


------------------------------

Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2001 09:40:58 -0700
From: "D. Stimits" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development.system,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Re: http loopback taking 14 minutes

David Efflandt wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 01 Mar 2001, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >> >
> >> > I have a java app which calls httpd.  Both httpd and my java app are on
> >> > the same box, but I address the server with its name, i.e.
> >> > http://www.nowhere.com:8080/my.jsp.  I can see that "my.jsp" has
> >> > finished, by its having written to a log, but may java app, which is
> >> > acting as the client, does not get a response for as long as 14 minutes.
> >> >
> >> > What could create the delay?  I can ping in 0.1ms, but this http
> >> > response...
> >> >
> >> > - Craig
> >>
> >> Your name lookup is most likely timing out on one DNS server, then going
> >> to the next. The lag is the timeout. You can verify this by using your
> >> numeric/dotted-decimal ip address in place of "www.nowhere.com"...if
> >> dotted-decimal form is fast, then it is your DNS source, whereby the
> >> first one does not know the answer and takes its time getting to the
> >> second source (and then maybe the third). A place to look is
> >> /etc/resolv.conf, and /etc/host.conf. Be sure your /etc/hosts file is
> >> searched first before DNS, and that DNS servers are listed correctly.
> >> That way if "www.nowhere.com" is listed in /etc/hosts, it'll be found
> >> instantly.
> >
> >My host.conf looks like this:
> >   order host,bind
> >   multi on
> >
> >My resolv.conf, like this:
> >   domain nowhere.com
> >   nameserver 172.16.0.240
> >   nameserver 172.16.0.241
> >   search nowhere.com nowhere.net
> >
> >and a nslookup returns (very quickly):
> >   # nslookup europa.nowhere.com
> >   Server:  ns1.nowhere.com
> >   Address:  172.16.0.240
> >
> >   Non-authoritative answer:
> >   Name:    europa.nowhere.com
> >   Address:  172.16.0.42
> >
> >   #
> >
> >Anything look wrong...
> 
> Yes, there could be confusion with the REAL nowhere.com.  You should use a
> fictional domain for private IPs.  What does 'nslookup 172.16.0.42' return
> (does your reverse lookup work)?

Fictional versus real won't hurt IF the /etc/hosts lists the correct
internal address for a specific machine on that domain name, AND the
hosts file is consulted prior to DNS. In the case of accidentally having
DNS try to look up a non-existent host of a real domain, there would be
considerably less than a 14 minute wait for DNS to say it doesn't exist
(unless network conditions were bad). DNS failure (a DNS failing to
respond), versus successful lookup saying the host is non-existent, can
take quite a long time. One other interesting possibility is for
/etc/hosts to be set up correctly for an internal host name, but having
routing incorrectly try to route through the outside world to get to an
internal interface.

> 
> > set q=any
> > nowhere.com
> Server:  localhost
> Address:  127.0.0.1
> 
> Non-authoritative answer:
> nowhere.com     nameserver = NS1.nowhere.com
> nowhere.com     nameserver = NS2.nowhere.com
> nowhere.com     internet address = 204.29.203.70
> 
> Authoritative answers can be found from:
> nowhere.com     nameserver = NS1.nowhere.com
> nowhere.com     nameserver = NS2.nowhere.com
> NS1.nowhere.com internet address = 169.207.160.20
> NS2.nowhere.com internet address = 206.190.29.173
> 
> --
> David Efflandt  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  http://www.de-srv.com/
> http://www.autox.chicago.il.us/  http://www.berniesfloral.net/
> http://cgi-help.virtualave.net/  http://hammer.prohosting.com/~cgi-wiz/

------------------------------

From: Stefano Ghirlanda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SOLVED: ip on hp network printer
Date: 03 Mar 2001 17:44:29 +0100

Hi,
I had been stupid here. The network settings could be configured directly
from the printer's lcd panel, they where just a littel bit hidden. 

Thanks to all that helped!

-- 
Stefano - Hodie quinto Nonas Martias MMI est

------------------------------

From: "Terry Denbo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: linux.redhat.misc,linux.redhat.install,comp.os.linux.misc
Subject: Kernel Panic, or hang off boot disk...
Date: Sat, 3 Mar 2001 08:59:23 -0800

I had to replace my SCSI card, unfortunately it was with a different brand.
When booting up, I get a kernel panic, because it's loading the wrong
drivers.  I try booting off a boot disk, type "linux single", but it get's
to a certian point and hangs at this point:

VFS: Mounted root (ext2 filesystem) readonly.
change_root: old root has d_count=1
Trying to unmount old root ... okay
Freeing unused kernel memory: 64k freed


Will not go past this point.  Please help!  It's dead in the water until
this is fixed!!

Terry



------------------------------


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