Date: Tue, 8 Aug 1995 12:43:30 -0400 From: Pierre Sarrazin <sarrazip@CS.McGill.CA> To: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Problem with compat20.tgz on 2.0.5 Message-ID: <199508081643.MAA02267@maggie.cs.mcgill.ca>
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I recently installed FreeBSD 2.0.5 on my 486. I had the installation program extract a few distributions (from the DOS partition), like bin and manpages, but not compat20.tgz. I later extracted compat20.tgz manually with a command like this, under root of course: cd /; tar xzvf compat20.tgz As soon as this was done, "all" programs caused SEGFAULTs (even ls). I suppose that some shared libraries in /usr/lib were corrupted. I'd like to know how the extraction of a distribution can cause so much harm. What did I do wrong? Did the installation procedure hide some important informations from me? For those who are interested: I rebooted by typing "/kernel -s" at the "Boot:" prompt; then I did fsck and then "mount -a /". At that point, I erased the contents of /usr/lib and replaced it with the /usr/lib/* files of the bindist, which I still had on the DOS partition. Pierre.
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