02-27-2017
Do not restore /etc/conf. You will have to re-install RS506a and any other patches as well. These are important because they ensure that your system is Y2K compliant.
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. HP-UX
Hi all!
I've a strange problem. I would use the GNU Make tool on HPUX 11.11. To archive this, i have compiled the sourcecode and renamed HP make in /usr/bin from make to make_old. Now i have make a softlink from /usr/local/bin/make (GNU version) to /usr/bin/make. All things here are ok, but... (1 Reply)
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2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
$ errpt | more
IDENTIFIER TIMESTAMP T C RESOURCE_NAME DESCRIPTION
3074FEB7 0802050205 T H fscsi1 ADAPTER ERROR
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B8113DD1 0802050205 T H fcs1 LINK ERROR
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3. AIX
Hi,
Has anyone please got some advise as to how I can make a CD/DVD on an AIX 5.3 system so that it can be fully recoverd just by inserting the backed up system.
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4. AIX
Hi everyone
I'm green AIX user or rather beginner (light green).
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Can someone of you provide me with link/procedure/instruction how to do it?
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5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hey peeps,
Here is somethin u might find interestin....
Is it possible to recover data from a partition which used to be an ext3 file sytem with some nice forgotten backups, which now is an lvm partion containg root partition of another OS. :)
I couldn't create any mess better than this, can... (2 Replies)
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dear fellows;
i have used ld.so.preload file to override connect() function, dynamic library overriding, it did worked really fine ......
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I have a CentOS release 5.2 (Final)host running kernel 2.6.18-92.el5 with at raid 10 that had two mirrored drives fail. The drives were re-inserted and now the raid shows healthy (for now). I tried to mount but got an Input/output error. I then attempted a fsck:
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8. Red Hat
Hi folks,
I am facing issue of my system (host1) getting hanged after throwing following ntpd messages. I am not able to ssh to the server there after. only option is to restart the host:
Dec 29 02:58:51 host1 ntpd: time reset -0.207907 s
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LEARN ABOUT SUNOS
aset.restore
aset.restore(1M) System Administration Commands aset.restore(1M)
NAME
aset.restore - restores system files to their content before ASET is installed
SYNOPSIS
aset.restore [-d aset_dir]
DESCRIPTION
aset.restore restores system files that are affected by the Automated Security Enhancement Tool (ASET) to their pre-ASET content. When ASET
is executed for the first time, it saves and archives the original system files in the /usr/aset/archives directory. The aset.restore
utility reinstates these files. It also deschedules ASET, if it is currently scheduled for periodic execution. See asetenv(4).
If you have made changes to system files after running ASET, these changes are lost when you run aset.restore. If you want to be abso-
lutely sure that you keep the existing system state, it is recommended that you back-up your system before using aset.restore.
You should use aset.restore, under the following circumstances:
You want to remove ASET permanently and restore the original system (if you want to deactivate ASET, you can remove it from schedul-
ing).
You are unfamiliar with ASET and want to experiment with it. You can use aset.restore to restore the original system state.
When some major system functionality is not working properly and you suspect that ASET is causing the problem; you may want to
restore the system to see if the problem persists without ASET.
aset.restore requires root privileges to execute.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-d aset_dir Specify the working directory for ASET. By default, this directory is /usr/aset. With this option the archives directory
will be located under aset_dir.
FILES
/usr/aset/archives archive of system files prior to executing aset
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWast |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
aset(1M), asetenv(4), attributes(5)
System Administration Guide: Basic Administration
SunOS 5.10 11 Oct 1991 aset.restore(1M)