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Full Discussion: Could be a corrupted file?
Operating Systems HP-UX Could be a corrupted file? Post 302158840 by Perderabo on Wednesday 16th of January 2008 11:22:15 AM
Old 01-16-2008
That is a character special file. By convention, it should be in /dev. When you copy from it, you are trying to read from a device driver. A file system object like that is created with the mknod command, although HP-UX provides insf and mksf which really need to be used except in certain special cases. The 64 is the major number and this id's which driver you are trying to use. The HP-UX command lsdev will list all drivers with thier special numbers. lssf might also be able to tell you about it if it is valid. Be careful with special files. If you write to one, you could scribble on a disk.
 

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mknod(1M)																 mknod(1M)

NAME
mknod - create special files SYNOPSIS
name major minor name major minor name DESCRIPTION
The command creates the following types of files: o Character device special file (first form), o Block device special file (second form), o FIFO file, sometimes called a named pipe (third form). name is the path name of the file to be created. The newly created file has a default mode that is readable and writable by all users(0666), but the mode is modified by the current setting of the user's file mode creation mask (see umask(1)). Character and Block Special Files Character device special files are used for devices that can transfer single bytes at a time, such as nine-track magnetic tape drives, printers, plotters, disk drives operating in "raw" mode, and terminals. To create a character special file, use the argument. Block device special files are used for devices that usually transfer a block of data at a time, such as disk drives. To create a block device special file, use the argument. The remaining arguments specify the device that will be accessible through the new special file: major The major number specifies the major device type (for example, the device driver number). minor The minor number specifies the device location, which is typically, but not always, the unit, drive, and/or line number. The major and minor values can each be specified in hexadecimal, octal, or decimal, using C language conventions (decimal: no leading zero; octal: leading zero; hexadecimal: leading The assignment of major and minor device numbers is specific to each HP-UX system. Refer to the System Administrator manuals supplied with your system for details. Only users who have appropriate privileges can use to create a character or block device special file. FIFO files To create a FIFO (named pipe or buffer) file, use the argument. You can also use the command for this purpose (see mkfifo(1)). All users can use to create FIFO files. WARNINGS
Access Control Lists In HFS file systems, optional ACL entries can be added to special files and FIFOs with the command (see chacl(1)). In JFS file systems, optional ACL entries can be added to special files and FIFOs with the command (see setacl(1)). However, system programs are likely to silently change or eliminate the optional ACL entries for these files. SEE ALSO
chacl(1), mkdir(1), mkfifo(1), setacl(1), umask(1), lsdev(1M), sam(1M), mknod(2), acl(5), aclv(5), mknod(5). HP-UX System Administrator manuals STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
mknod: SVID2, SVID3, XPG2 mknod(1M)
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