Shutting down a Sun System with a Shell Script

Greg Onufer pyramid!daver!mfgfoc!exodus at decwrl.dec.com
Tue Dec 20 10:17:01 AEST 1988


elsie!ado at ncifcrf.gov (Arthur David Olson):
> STELLABO at CSHLAB.BITNET writes: 
> No.  A quick look reveals that. . .
>   Script started on Wed Nov 23 17: 19:42 1988
>   elsie$ /bin/ls -l /etc/umount /etc/dump
>   lrwxrwxrwx  1 root           15 Oct 11 15: 40 /etc/dump -> ../usr/etc/dump
>   lrwxrwxrwx  1 root           17 Oct 11 15: 40 /etc/umount -> ../usr/etc/umount
> To make things work right, Sun would at least get to move dump and umount
> to /sbin.

You are completely off-base on this one.  You must be running SunOS 4.0.
In SunOS 4.0 /usr is mounted read-only.  So why bother going to single-
user??  No one can change /usr (although some do... but that's just a sad
story), so back it up whenever you want.  But since all of us are not
running SunOS 4.0, let me just say that I have never had a problem with
full dumps done on active file systems.

-greg
-- 
Greg Onufer   //  Focus Semiconductor  //     University of the Pacific
  exodus at cheers.uucp (daver!cheers!exodus at Sun.COM) 	415-965-0604



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