Bash /usr/bin/whoami Input/output Error
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Bashrc Input/output Error
on every command Hello Unregistered, Dell Support Forum has closed. Please take a moment to read the details in the sticky, which you can find by clicking here Having an Issue With Posting ? Do you want to help us debug the posting issues ? < is the place to report it, thanks ! Results 1 to 6 of 6 Thread: reading directory input output error linux Bash: Input/Output Error on every command Thread Tools Show Printable Version Subscribe to this Thread… Display Linear Mode Switch to Hybrid Mode Switch to Threaded Mode September 27th, 2008 #1 manish_jain View Profile View Forum Posts Private Message First Cup of Ubuntu Join Date Jul 2006 Beans 8 Bash: Input/Output Error on every command Hi I have a very old Dell Inspiron on which Ubuntu 7.04 is installed. The kernel version is 2.6.24-19-generic. Sometimes, suddenly something happens and then every command from bash gives the same error: ~$ autoconf -V -bash: /usr/bin/autoconf: Input/output error ~$ ad -bash: /usr/bin/python: Input/output error The file system becomes read-only and no files can even be 'touch'ed. However, uname -r (and possibly other commands) still keep working. If you press Tab-Tab at the terminal, it hangs and then there is no way other than hard-boot to get stuff to work again. Can anyone suggest something to repair this annoying recurrence. Last edited by manish_jain; September 27th, 2008 at 12:48 AM. Adv Reply September 27th, 2008 #2 MJN View Profile View Forum Posts Private Mess
Tags Search LQ Wiki Search Tutorials/Articles Search HCL Search Reviews Search ISOs Go to Page... LinuxQuestions.org > Forums > Linux Forums > Linux - Distributions > Slackware .bashrc input/output error "/usr/bin/ls: reading directory .: Input/output error" User Name Remember Me? Password Slackware This
Centos Input/output Error
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Bash /root/.bashrc Input/output Error
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Search Username Password Remember Me? Register Lost Password? facebook google twitter rss Free Web Developer Tools Advanced Search Forum Operating Systems Linux Help Input / Output error Thread: Input / Output error Share This Thread Tweet This + 1 this Post To http://forums.devshed.com/linux-help-33/input-output-error-147505.html Linkedin Subscribe to this Thread Subscribe to This Thread May 12th, 2004,09:35 PM #1 roninblade http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/system.html View Profile View Forum Posts // no comment Devshed Intermediate (1500 - 1999 posts) Join Date Dec 2001 Posts 1,643 Rep Power 41 Input / Output error for some reason the remote server im connecting to started generating input/ouput error whenever i try to run any sort of command like vi or su. some commands output error are working though cd, ls, ps, less, more. the remote server is using redhat9. what could be wrong here? Last edited by roninblade; May 12th, 2004 at 09:42 PM. Faq Reply With Quote May 12th, 2004,10:49 PM #2 No Profile Picture codergeek42 View Profile View Forum Posts Visit Homepage Brony & F/OSS Advocate Devshed Supreme Being (6500+ posts) Facebook Twitter bashrc input/output error Google + Linkedin Join Date Jul 2003 Location Anaheim, CA (USA) Posts 6,649 Rep Power 2478 Your SSH-ing? What ssh client are you using? What's the I/O error(s) it gives you? ~~ Peter ~~ :: ( Who am I? ) :: ( Peter's Musings: Uploading myself, bit by bit... ) :: ( Electronic Frontier Foundation ) :: ( I'm a GNU/Linux addict and Free Software Advocate. ) :: ( How to Ask Questions the Smart Way ) :: ( The Fedora Project, sponsored by Red Hat ) :: ( GNOME: The Free Software Desktop Project ) :: ( GnuPG Public Key ) :: ( About me on the WIki ) Faq Reply With Quote May 12th, 2004,11:23 PM #3 roninblade View Profile View Forum Posts // no comment Devshed Intermediate (1500 - 1999 posts) Join Date Dec 2001 Posts 1,643 Rep Power 41 OpenSSH 3.7 from the slackware console. for example when trying to run vi i get : -bash: /usr/bin/vim: Input/output error anyways, i've asked around after the my post above and most of the answers i got said it's a hardware error. Faq Reply With Quote May 12th, 2004,11:36 PM #4 No Profile Picture codergeek42 View Profile View Forum Posts Visit Homepage Brony & F/OSS Advocate Devshed Supreme Being (6500+ posts)
of many of these comands. These are usually invoked by root and used for system maintenance or emergency filesystem repairs. Use with caution, as some of these commands may damage your system if misused.
Users and GroupsusersShow all logged on users. This is the approximate equivalent of who -q.groupsLists the current user and the groups she belongs to. This corresponds to the $GROUPS internal variable, but gives the group names, rather than the numbers.bash$ groups bozita cdrom cdwriter audio xgrp bash$ echo $GROUPS 501chown, chgrpThe chown command changes the ownership of a file or files. This command is a useful method that root can use to shift file ownership from one user to another. An ordinary user may not change the ownership of files, not even her own files. [1] root# chown bozo *.txt The chgrp command changes the group ownership of a file or files. You must be owner of the file(s) as well as a member of the destination group (or root) to use this operation. chgrp --recursive dunderheads *.data # The "dunderheads" group will now own all the "*.data" files #+ all the way down the $PWD directory tree (that's what "recursive" means).useradd, userdelThe useradd administrative command adds a user account to the system and creates a home directory for that particular user, if so specified. The corresponding userdel command removes a user account from the system [2]