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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers I got a corrupt /etc/inittab file....what next? Post 28986 by Ivo on Friday 27th of September 2002 04:02:56 AM
Old 09-27-2002
Power I got a corrupt /etc/inittab file....what next?

Hi guys,

For some reason a client has given us a Sun Netra T1 with Solaris 8 to administer for them. That's always good business. However, the other day we rebooted the machine and to our amazement, after doing the preliminary hardware tests, we got an error messgae saying that /etc/inittab was corrupt. It subsequently wanted to bring the machine up into single user mode which also failed. I guess because it also needs the /etc/inittab file. On top of this we don't have a cdrom or floppy drive in it, only a network card.

Has anyone got any suggestions as to how I can fix this problem.

Also, I am not new to Unix but I AM new to Sun/Solaris.

Thanks in advance.
Ivo
 

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EJECT(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  EJECT(1)

NAME
eject -- eject a floppy disk, cdrom or tape SYNOPSIS
eject [-fv] [-l | -L | -U] [-t device-type] [-d] device eject -n DESCRIPTION
The eject program ejects a medium from the specified device. It can also load a cdrom in the drive if this operation is supported by the hardware. The device argument specifies a device either by its full path name (identified by a /dev/ prefix), or by one of the built-in nicknames. If the medium contains a file system that is currently mounted, eject will attempt to unmount the file system before ejecting. The following options are available: -d Deprecated. -f Force the eject operation without attempting to unmount any file systems first. -l Load media in the drive (only supported for the cdrom device type). -L Lock the media into the drive (but see BUGS below). -n List the built-in nicknames on standard output. -t device-type Specify the device type. The argument must be one of diskette, floppy, cdrom, disk, or tape. This option is necessary when ejecting a device for which no built-in knowledge is available. -U Unlock the media from the drive. -v Display some of the actions taken on standard output. BUGS
Most disk drivers automatically lock the media on the first open and unlock it on the last close, making 'eject -L' almost useless, since when it closes the device, it gets unlocked again. BSD
October 6, 2001 BSD
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