Black hole file

Guru's Inc. rikki at macom1.UUCP
Fri Jan 20 08:28:18 AEST 1989


It's not too surprising that you get the same inode if your system is not
too busy.  When you delete an inode, he's going to be at the top of the 
list and ends up being the next one allocated when you make the new file.

Any other messages come out?  You don't happen to have a space between
"black" and "hole" do you?  I, too, would like to see the complete output
from ls and od.



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