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Full Discussion: reading the hard drive
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users reading the hard drive Post 33957 by norsk hedensk on Monday 27th of January 2003 04:03:21 PM
Old 01-27-2003
what did you edit in the /etc/ directory? since you say your machine wont read the drive, 2 things come to mind, either, 1. you didnt shutdown the computer properly, resulting in a corrupt filesystem, or 2. you edited the file /etc/fstab and messed up your mount points.
if the case is number 2, then it shouldnt be too hard to fix, what OS are you running on the machine? if you bought it in a store, it might have come with a sort of "rescue disk" where you will boot from that floppy and you may be able to manually mount the drive and restore your /etc/fstab file. if its the first one, a corrupt filesystem, then fsuck (hopefully) would be able to clear things up when you boot the machine. what happens when you boot? provide more info including your OS and what exactly you did, and what happens when you try to boot, and we can help you better.
 

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crypt(1)							   User Commands							  crypt(1)

NAME
crypt - encode or decode a file SYNOPSIS
crypt [password] DESCRIPTION
The crypt utility encrypts and decrypts the contents of a file. crypt reads from the standard input and writes on the standard output. The password is a key that selects a particular transformation. If no password is given, crypt demands a key from the terminal and turns off printing while the key is being typed in. crypt encrypts and decrypts with the same key: example% crypt key < clear.file > encrypted.file example% crypt key < encrypted.file | pr prints the contents of clear.file. Files encrypted by crypt are compatible with those treated by the editors ed(1), ex(1), and vi(1) in encryption mode. The security of encrypted files depends on three factors: the fundamental method must be hard to solve; direct search of the key space must be infeasible; "sneak paths" by which keys or cleartext can become visible must be minimized. crypt implements a one-rotor machine designed along the lines of the German Enigma, but with a 256-element rotor. Methods of attack on such machines are widely known, thus crypt provides minimal security. The transformation of a key into the internal settings of the machine is deliberately designed to be expensive, that is, to take a substan- tial fraction of a second to compute. However, if keys are restricted to (say) three lower-case letters, then encrypted files can be read by expending only a substantial fraction of five minutes of machine time. Since the key is an argument to the crypt command, it is potentially visible to users executing ps(1) or a derivative command. To minimize this possibility, crypt takes care to destroy any record of the key immediately upon entry. No doubt the choice of keys and key security are the most vulnerable aspect of crypt. FILES
/dev/tty for typed key ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
des(1), ed(1), ex(1), ps(1), vi(1), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 8 Mar 2005 crypt(1)
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