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Re: [Dazuko-help] Failure and Success


From: Bernd Adda
Subject: Re: [Dazuko-help] Failure and Success
Date: Fri, 09 Apr 2010 10:12:47 +0200
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i686; de; rv:1.9.1.8) Gecko/20100205 SeaMonkey/2.0.3

hi Scott

I killed the entries in /etc/fstab (with "#")
Then I wrote into  /etc/init.d/boot.local:
"modprobe dazukofs;mount -a -t dazukofs;" (without " ")
That works for all.

adda









address@hidden schrieb:
> 
>  Well, the combination of adding "dazukofs"  to /etc/modules, and an entry in 
> the /etc/fstab file seems to 
> have done the trick - DazukoFS is loaded, and AVGuard finds it and runs in 
> on-access mode.
> 
> However, at first there was a problem...
> 
> my entry in /etc/fstab was
> /home  /home  dazukofs  defaults  0  0
> as the README file suggests, (except naturally for which directory to watch)
> but when I did so, Linux did not fully boot.  It first said it could not 
> update ICEauthority file
> (/home/scott/.ICEauthority).  Then a config server ...gconf-sanity-check-2 
> failed with code 256,
> and finally Nautilus could not create /home/scott/Desktop, and  
> /home/scott/.nautilus.
> I was left with a completely blank (but lovely Karmic orange) screen.  I 
> tried many combinations of function keys to get a terminal (not remembering 
> how), but was forced to press my computer's reset button, and then booted 
> into recovery mode.
> 
> After much thinking and trying, I did the mount command with -haT options, 
> and found that my /home partition had no entry except for dazukofs - and 
> appeared to be based at the same point as /, as the disk space used and free 
> exactly matched that for /, and not the values that should have been for the 
> separate partition.
> It seemed obvious that the system could not find or get access to the /home 
> partition.
> 
> After learning a bit about how to use ed, I changed  /home  /home  to  
> /home/scott  /home/scott  and rebooted.
> Success.  Full boot, and AVGuard functioned.  Separate mount listings for 
> /home and /home/scott, with correct values.
> 
> I don't know if the problem was that /home was the "root" of a separate 
> partition, or that the /etc/fstab line options should have been different (I 
> honestly do not know what "0  0" accomplishes, and "defaults" seems to result 
> in rw - maybe other options should have been added.  I also do not know why 
> the directory needs to be listed twice: the implication is that the two 
> entries can be different, but what that means I have no clue...)
> 
> Now all I have to do is find a way to have a window pop up when a virus is 
> discovered - at the moment, I have to look at the log files... 
> 
> -Scott Jacobs
> 
> 
>  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Dazuko-help mailing list
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