on 15:39 Tue 08 Mar, Todd Cary (todd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > Simon - > > Did I screw up? I deleted what was in /boot! Yes, as others have noted. Lessons: 1: Don't go randomly/arbitrarily deleting system files (unless you're curious to see what happens when randomly deleting systems files). 2: Understand how Linux functions. E.g.: the boot process, and the significance of the /boot directory/filesystem. 3: Use your package management system. If you /are/ going to delete arbitrary system files, doing it through your package manager is going to a) give you some idea when you're about to do something really stupid (generally other Really Important Stuff depends on them) and b) at the very least does the damage in an orderly manner. 4: Have a boot disk. Know how to use it. 5: Know how to restore GRUB and an emergency boot kernel. Circling back to #3: your package management system can also dig you out of this hole. You should be able to identify and replace all files in an arbitrary tree, for example, /boot, using an RPM bash one-liner: $ rpm -qa # lists all packages installed $ rpm -ql <package> # lists all files in a package $ command | grep -q <expression> # success/fail on match / no match $ command1 && command2 # runs command2 if command1 exits true # rpm -Uvh --replacepkgs <package list> # (re)installs packages $ $( command ) # executes output of 'command' Putting that together: rpm -Uvh --replacepkgs $( for pkg in $( rpm -qa ); do rpm -ql $pkg | grep -q ^/boot && && echo $pkg done ) Incidentally, the list of packages works out to: filesystem-2.4.0-3.el5 grub-0.97-13.5 kernel-2.6.18-194.17.1.el5 redhat-logos-4.9.99-11.el5.centos -- Dr. Ed Morbius, Chief Scientist / | Robot Wrangler / Staff Psychologist | When you seek unlimited power Krell Power Systems Unlimited | Go to Krell! _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos