02-18-2010
reply
you are right what you said...
and that is naturally generally happens...
but in book design of unix os by maurica bach there it is written...
there are some exceptional cases also where free inode number is less than remembered inode.....which seems impossible...
just let me know if u can find any such cases..
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CLRI(8) BSD System Manager's Manual CLRI(8)
NAME
clri -- clear an inode
SYNOPSIS
clri special_device inode_number ...
DESCRIPTION
Clri is obsoleted for normal file system repair work by fsck(8).
Clri zeros out the inodes with the specified inode number(s) on the filesystem residing on the given special_device. The fsck(8) utility is
usually run after clri to reclaim the zero'ed inode(s) and the blocks previously claimed by those inode(s). Both read and write permission
are required on the specified special_device.
The primary purpose of this routine is to remove a file which for some reason is not being properly handled by fsck(8). Once removed, it is
anticipated that fsck(8) will be able to clean up the resulting mess.
SEE ALSO
fsck(8), fsdb(8), icheck(8), ncheck(8)
BUGS
If the file is open, the work of clri will be lost when the inode is written back to disk from the inode cache.
4th Berkeley Distribution April 19, 1994 4th Berkeley Distribution