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Full Discussion: Hard Disk at 99% Help!
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Hard Disk at 99% Help! Post 93551 by mannyisme on Tuesday 20th of December 2005 06:30:29 AM
Old 12-20-2005
Oh yeah I majorly screwed it up. I went in and saw that c0t0d0s0 was at 100% so what did the dummy newbie do? yes I removed it and now I can't get in. It just keeps trying to boot up but then reboots and I have no CD to boot off of. I am majorly screwed. lol i HAVE BEEN WORKING FOR OVER 24 HOURS STRAIGHT. tHEY BETTER GIVE ME SOME SLACK. Smilie

Any suggestions after screwing this up??
 

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LN(1)							      General Commands Manual							     LN(1)

NAME
ln - make links SYNOPSIS
ln [ -s ] sourcename [ targetname ] ln [ -s ] sourcename1 sourcename2 [ sourcename3 ... ] targetdirectory DESCRIPTION
A link is a directory entry referring to a file; the same file (together with its size, all its protection information, etc.) may have several links to it. There are two kinds of links: hard links and symbolic links. By default ln makes hard links. A hard link to a file is indistinguishable from the original directory entry; any changes to a file are effective independent of the name used to reference the file. Hard links may not span file systems and may not refer to directories. The -s option causes ln to create symbolic links. A symbolic link contains the name of the file to which it is linked. The referenced file is used when an open(2) operation is performed on the link. A stat(2) on a symbolic link will return the linked-to file; an lstat(2) must be done to obtain information about the link. The readlink(2) call may be used to read the contents of a symbolic link. Symbolic links may span file systems and may refer to directories. Given one or two arguments, ln creates a link to an existing file sourcename. If targetname is given, the link has that name; targetname may also be a directory in which to place the link; otherwise it is placed in the current directory. If only the directory is specified, the link will be made to the last component of sourcename. Given more than two arguments, ln makes links in targetdirectory to all the named source files. The links made will have the same name as the files being linked to. SEE ALSO
rm(1), cp(1), mv(1), link(2), readlink(2), stat(2), symlink(2) 4th Berkeley Distribution April 10, 1986 LN(1)
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