On Thu, May 20, 2010 at 06:49:33PM -0400, Kwan Lowe wrote: > The service scripts can check for lock files. Do you have any stale > locks in /var/run/subsys? Thanks Kwan. If I remove /var/run/smbd.pid (and /var/run/nmbd.pid for that matter), the init.d/smb file still fails to get smbd running persistently. Same thing with removing /var/lock/subsys/smb - which gets touched by init.d/smb only after both files return 0 for successful starts, and does get touched in this case, even though of course smbd hasn't really run, if at all, for more than an instant. Plus, if it were a lock file problem, those scripts shouldn't be showing "[ OK ]," right? Also, since "sh /etc/init.d/smb (re)start" works but "/etc/init.d/smb (re)start" doesn't, I can't see how the difference between those two invocations would change the handling of the lock files. It's still the same script being run. Just some change in the environment whose subtlety escapes me. Whit _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos