Just a thought -- unmount /u05 and check what 'ls -l /u05' shows. If the permissions on the directory that you mount onto are wrong (not world-executable, should be 0755), rm -r (and many other commands) will fail in mysterious ways.... This message posted from opensolaris.org _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss
- [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf" Anton B. Rang
- [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf" Tom Simpson
- [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf" Tom Simpson
- [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf" Tom Simpson
- [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf" Anton B. Rang
- Re: [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -r... Darren Reed
- Re: [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -r... Philip Brown
- Re: [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "r... Eric Schrock
- Re: [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "r... Darren Dunham
- Re: [zfs-discuss] Re: Clones and "rm -rf&qu... Nicolas Williams