Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Odd File Listing and unable to deleted Post 72876 by Perderabo on Wednesday 25th of May 2005 09:47:27 AM
Old 05-25-2005
That looks to me like a damaged filesystem. If you delete those files you may destroy the filesystem or panic the os. First you should prove that the fs is in an impossible state. Your first file is claiming a link count of 29561 so check to see if there are 29560 other links to that file. Do a "ls -li" on the file to see the inode number. Then do a find command resticted to the file system looking for that inode number. If you don't find 29561 links, the filesystem is hosed.

You can attempt to repair it, but you may need to rebuild it. I can't get any more specific since you didn't give your os and fs type.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Odd file with no name

OS: Solaris 2.6 File with no name created Mar of 2000 - ls (with or without options) shows the file but no name associated with it. Example: ls -ltca -rw-r--r-- 1 root other 9721 Apr 16 2003 printcap -rw-r--r-- 1 root other 267 Apr 16 2003 -rw-r--r-- 1 root other 258 Apr 16... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RTM
3 Replies

2. Linux

how can i restore a deleted file

I am a relatively new linux user.would like to know how to undo a deleted file (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wojtyla
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Listing Deleted Files and Directories

Please provide me a shell script so that i can list which file or directory has been deleted, by which user and at what time. The script should take date as argument and should list out name of the file/directory, which user had deleted them and at what time since that particular date. Kindly post. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: raviviolet13
1 Replies

4. Solaris

/etc/passwd file been deleted

Hi Folks , Would be grateful if someone could help me out in one of the question that came to my mind . If the /etc/passwd file has been deleted and the system has been rebooted . Then i dont think that any user would be able to login and the system will be useless . Whats the best solution for... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gera_sachin125
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to know who has deleted the file.

Hi, We have a file which needs supper user previleges to delete. There are 10 users having super user preveleges. Some times back that file got deleted. How to know who has deleted that file? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: siba.s.nayak
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Odd and even file names

Hello, I want to sort/identify 600 files according to odd or even numbers in the files names. How can I do this? The goal is to perform different ImageMagick operations based on even or odd numbers in the file names. The file names have this pattern: bdf0001.tif, bdf0044.tif and bdf0136.tif ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: garganmou
4 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

odd problem in read lines from file

Hi, I wrote a small program to read lines from a file and count the lines. The program is as below: filename=$1 count=0 cat $filename | while read -r line do printf "%5d:%s\n" $count "$line" count=$((count + 1)) done echo " $count " After I run the program, the result is... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jianma
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

[Solved] How to remove listing of current user cmd from ps -ef listing?

Hi All, Could you please help to resolve my following issues: Problem Description: Suppose my user name is "MI90". i.e. $USER = MI90 when i run below command, i get all the processes running on the system containing name MQ. ps -ef | grep MQ But sometimes it lists... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: KDMishra
8 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Seperate Odd and Even numbers from 1 file to 2 files

Hey guys. I have been trying to figure out an easy way to seperate a liste of 150k numbers (10 digits) in a .txt file into odd and even numbers with each of their own files, for a project at work. I've tried Excel, but it was too much for it and it wasnt very simple. So i gave up after... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: TranceC
13 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Restoring deleted file with rm -rf

Is there a way I could recover a deleted text file with "rm -rf" command. Running CentOS 6.5. Thank you. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: galford
5 Replies
xfs_check(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      xfs_check(8)

NAME
xfs_check - check XFS filesystem consistency SYNOPSIS
xfs_check [ -i ino ] ... [ -b bno ] ... [ -f ] [ -s ] [ -v ] [ -l logdev ] device DESCRIPTION
xfs_check checks whether an XFS filesystem is consistent. It is normally run only when there is reason to believe that the filesystem has a consistency problem. The filesystem to be checked is specified by the device argument, which should be the disk or volume device for the filesystem. Filesystems stored in files can also be checked, using the -f flag. The filesystem should normally be unmounted or read-only during the execution of xfs_check. Otherwise, spurious problems are reported. OPTIONS
-f Specifies that the filesystem image to be processed is stored in a regular file at device (see the mkfs.xfs(8) -d file option). This might happen if an image copy of a filesystem has been made into an ordinary file. -l logdev Specifies the device where the filesystem's external log resides. Only for those filesystems which use an external log. See the mkfs.xfs(8) -l option, and refer to xfs(5) for a detailed description of the XFS log. -s Specifies that only serious errors should be reported. Serious errors are those that make it impossible to find major data struc- tures in the filesystem. This option can be used to cut down the amount of output when there is a serious problem, when the output might make it difficult to see what the real problem is. -v Specifies verbose output; it is impossibly long for a reasonably-sized filesystem. This option is intended for internal use only. -i ino Specifies verbose behavior for the specified inode ino. For instance, it can be used to locate all the blocks associated with a given inode. -b bno Specifies verbose behavior for the specific filesystem block at bno. For instance, it can be used to determine what a specific block is used for. The block number is a "file system block number". Conversion between disk addresses (i.e. addresses reported by xfs_bmap(8)) and file system blocks may be accomplished using xfs_db(8)'s convert command. Any output that is produced when xfs_check is not run in verbose mode indicates that the filesystem has an inconsistency. The filesystem can be repaired using either xfs_repair(8) to fix the filesystem in place, or by using xfsdump(8) and mkfs.xfs(8) to dump the filesystem, make a new filesystem, then use xfsrestore(8) to restore the data onto the new filesystem. Note that xfsdump may fail on a corrupt filesystem. However, if the filesystem is mountable, xfsdump can be used to try and save important data before repairing the filesystem with xfs_repair. If the filesystem is not mountable though, xfs_repair is the only viable option. DIAGNOSTICS
If the filesystem is completely corrupt, a core dump might be produced instead of the message device is not a valid filesystem If the filesystem is very large (has many files) then xfs_check might run out of memory. In this case the message out of memory is printed. The following is a description of the most likely problems and the associated messages. Most of the diagnostics produced are only meaning- ful with an understanding of the structure of the filesystem. agf_freeblks n, counted m in ag a The freeblocks count in the allocation group header for allocation group a doesn't match the number of blocks counted free. agf_longest n, counted m in ag a The longest free extent in the allocation group header for allocation group a doesn't match the longest free extent found in the allocation group. agi_count n, counted m in ag a The allocated inode count in the allocation group header for allocation group a doesn't match the number of inodes counted in the allocation group. agi_freecount n, counted m in ag a The free inode count in the allocation group header for allocation group a doesn't match the number of inodes counted free in the allocation group. block a/b expected inum 0 got i The block number is specified as a pair (allocation group number, block in the allocation group). The block is used multiple times (shared), between multiple inodes. This message usually follows a message of the next type. block a/b expected type unknown got y The block is used multiple times (shared). block a/b type unknown not expected The block is unaccounted for (not in the freelist and not in use). link count mismatch for inode nnn (name xxx), nlink m, counted n The inode has a bad link count (number of references in directories). rtblock b expected inum 0 got i The block is used multiple times (shared), between multiple inodes. This message usually follows a message of the next type. rtblock b expected type unknown got y The real-time block is used multiple times (shared). rtblock b type unknown not expected The real-time block is unaccounted for (not in the freelist and not in use). sb_fdblocks n, counted m The number of free data blocks recorded in the superblock doesn't match the number counted free in the filesystem. sb_frextents n, counted m The number of free real-time extents recorded in the superblock doesn't match the number counted free in the filesystem. sb_icount n, counted m The number of allocated inodes recorded in the superblock doesn't match the number allocated in the filesystem. sb_ifree n, counted m The number of free inodes recorded in the superblock doesn't match the number free in the filesystem. SEE ALSO
mkfs.xfs(8), xfsdump(8), xfsrestore(8), xfs_ncheck(8), xfs_repair(8), xfs(5). xfs_check(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:06 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy