Adam Myrow said the following on Sat, Dec 07, 2002 at 12:18:34PM -0600: > Your best shot is to use the "file" command on the suspect files. This > may tell you what they are. The "strings" command is also handy since it > tries to display printable strings in binary files. With any luck, you > will be able to identify the critical files and restore/rename them and > they won't be corrupt. However, those types of crashes are pretty nasty. Actually, to be honest I'm not sure why I said a power failure. It was a power supply problem. I think it's that anyway, I keep getting interrupt error problems and the drive sounds like it's powering cycling. I can hear it sounding like when your first boot up the machine. I also have a zip drive which is louder and it helped me hear it in the first place. I removed that hdd and put in anther one in case it was the drive itself but it did the same thing. A friend suggested it is most likely the power supply. In any case I do have a ups which does come in very handy for sure. Sorry for the confusing message. I figured I'd have to use strings or something to get those files back. The problem is I'm not sure of the structure of the dpkg binaries to know what all goes where. I might just look at my other Debian box and compare. Cheers. -- Ever wonder if alternate worlds exist besides our own? Join the parallel-worlds mailing list to discuss this, and similar topics. click http://www.asmodean.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/parallel-worlds Raul A. Gallegos http://www.asmodean.net/contact.html