i believe a server re-install is required....ive done that before, what you did and i had to re-install....yet there might be a way to salvage it but im not exactly sure the proper way
On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 cweisiger@i-55.com wrote:
i believe a server re-install is required....ive done that before, what you did and i had to re-install....yet there might be a way to salvage it but im not exactly sure the proper way
surely when you do rpm -e rpm , rpm puts up a big warning saying 'ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO TRASH YOUR SYSTEM'
If not - why not ???
--> https://bugzilla.redhat.com
Lance
Thanks everyone for your help. I have now re-installed and upgraded to CentOS 3.4. All is looking fine.
On Tuesday 18 Jan 2005 2:58 pm, Lance Davis wrote:
On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 cweisiger@i-55.com wrote:
i believe a server re-install is required....ive done that before, what you did and i had to re-install....yet there might be a way to salvage it but im not exactly sure the proper way
surely when you do rpm -e rpm , rpm puts up a big warning saying 'ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO TRASH YOUR SYSTEM'
If not - why not ???
--> https://bugzilla.redhat.com
Lance
On Tue, January 18, 2005 9:26 am, JCT said:
Thanks everyone for your help. I have now re-installed and upgraded to CentOS 3.4. All is looking fine.
On Tuesday 18 Jan 2005 2:58 pm, Lance Davis wrote:
On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 cweisiger@i-55.com wrote:
i believe a server re-install is required....ive done that before,
what
you did and i had to re-install....yet there might be a way to salvage
it
but im not exactly sure the proper way
surely when you do rpm -e rpm , rpm puts up a big warning saying 'ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO TRASH YOUR SYSTEM'
If not - why not ???
--> https://bugzilla.redhat.com
Lance
I would think that it would save the database as an RPM.save file ... but i'm not sure, I never did that before :)
I can do it on a test machine and see what happens