Before you chroot, do "mount -bind..." of /sys, /dev, /proc and maybe /boot under the chroot dir to make chroot more useful.
Cheers,
Amos
On 11/22/08, Joe Barjo jobarjo78@yahoo.fr wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion. I did the rpm -Va but have quite a lot of prelink warnings. But filtering them out gives a good list of files to transfer.
I still wonder why the rsync method doesn't work, as I'm rsyncing from another server with the same distribution.
I also don't know how to re install grub from the debian. Under chroot, there are no devices. It seems that the root filesystem doesn't even get mounted, as I have no logs at all.
On Thu, Nov 20, 2008 at 5:04 PM, Lorenzo Quatrini lorenzo@gmk.it wrote:
Joe Barjo ha scritto:
Hello
[snip]
But my real question is: How can I get a list of files in the whole filesystem that were added or modified compared to all the files that come from rpms? Is there a script for doing such a thing?
I think that doing some scripting around rpm -Va (to find modified files from rpms) and a 'comm' between "rpm -qla" and something like "find /" (with some clean-up to get files not coming from rpms) will do the magic.
-- Regards Lorenzo Quatrini _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos