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Operating Systems AIX Moved "/*" to another destination - what to do? Post 302703753 by bakunin on Thursday 20th of September 2012 10:00:05 AM
Old 09-20-2012
Probably you won't be able to avoid a complete restore.

First thing: calm down. Nobody shaking for fear should be allowed anywhere near a system. Go out of the office for five minutes, smoke a cigarette, drink a coffee - anything, but DON'T TOUCH THE SYSTEM!

I wonder if your move even succeeded, because "/proo" is in the root-fs "/" and there is not that much space in it usually. Probably only a small part of vital files was really moved.

First, try if you still have the system binaries: try "mv". If it says something like "missing file operand" or a similar error this is fine - you still have it. If the answer is "not found" you're in deep manure.

In this case, change into "/proo" first and issue an "echo *" - this is the shell replacement for "ls", because if "mv" is missing then "ls" is probably missing too. Search for the binaries (probably "/proo/usr/bin"), then set the PATH temporarily to this directory where you found "mv":

Code:
PATH=/proo/usr/bin:$PATH ; export PATH

this should give you at least access to "mv".

- Check if in "/proo" are only the parts you moved there accidentally. Use "ls" if you have it, otherwise use "echo *" like above and compare the output with the output of a working system. It has not to be 100% congruent, but most of it should match.

- If this is the case try to move back everything you have moved away:

Code:
mv /proo/* /

I hope this helps.

bakunin
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rmm(1)							      General Commands Manual							    rmm(1)

NAME
rmm - remove messages (only available within the message handling system, mh) SYNOPSIS
rmm [+folder] [msgs] [-help] OPTIONS
Prints a list of the valid options to this command. The default settings for this command are: +folder defaults to the current folder msgs defaults to the current message DESCRIPTION
The rmm command deletes the current message from the current folder. You can specify messages and folders other than the current ones by using the +folder and msgs arguments. The current message is not changed by rmm, so a next will advance to the next message in the folder as expected. If you have defined a component rmmproc: in your file, then instead of simply renaming the message file, rmm will call the named program to delete the file. The rmm command removes messages by renaming the message files with a preceding comma. Many sites consider files that start with a comma to be a temporary backup, and arrange for cron(8) to remove such files once a day. PROFILE COMPONENTS
Path: To determine your Mail directory rmmproc: Program to delete the message FILES
The user profile. SEE ALSO
rmf(1) rmm(1)
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