Yes, they did something bizarre. Ask them why :)
Kris
___
Mornin' Kris / list...
Asked them why and they shrugged and said we didn't... So... I
unmounted all the nullfs mounts that it'd allow me to unmount (tmp, dev,
proc and bin were busy) and
Marc Coyles wrote:
Yes, they did something bizarre. Ask them why :)
Kris
___
Mornin' Kris / list...
Asked them why and they shrugged and said we didn't... So... I
unmounted all the nullfs mounts that it'd allow me to unmount (tmp, dev,
proc and
One of my servers appears to be having a slightly dippy moment...
Running FREEBSD 5.3-RELEASE-p5 i386 (I don't have the bottle to attempt
freebsd-update to 7.0-REL, altho I really should... Still a relative
newb tho, and not confident on a box I can only access by remote)
running WHM 11.23.2
Marc Coyles wrote:
One of my servers appears to be having a slightly dippy moment...
Running FREEBSD 5.3-RELEASE-p5 i386 (I don't have the bottle to attempt
freebsd-update to 7.0-REL, altho I really should... Still a relative
newb tho, and not confident on a box I can only access by remote)
Looks like they did some strange things trying to get it back. Those
look like nullfs mounts with the same source and destination, which
makes no sense. What does mount -v show you?
Hi Kris...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ mount -v
/dev/ad0s1a on / (ufs, local, writes: sync 715484 async 362440,
Marc Coyles wrote:
Looks like they did some strange things trying to get it back. Those
look like nullfs mounts with the same source and destination, which
makes no sense. What does mount -v show you?
Hi Kris...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ mount -v
/dev/ad0s1a on / (ufs, local, writes: sync