Re: ps reports Error: /proc must be mounted and also Segmentation fault?
> On Fri Nov 26, 1999 at 07:07:27AM +0200, Shaul Karl wrote:
> >
> > I am using http://www.debian.org/~aph/boot-floppies/19991118/bf-common.tar.gz.
> > untarred them into the common dir.
> [--------snip---------]
> >
> > Also note there are differences between your output and mine:
> > 1) Your ps output gives a header line.
> > 2) Without /proc my mount simply exit. No message like the one you are getting.
> > 3) I am not getting the processes you get after /proc is mounted. Can it be
> > that
> > I do not simulate an installation session correctly ?
> >
> > And where is ash?
> > [07:04:27 common]$ ls bin/a*
> > bin/ae bin/arch
> > [07:04:58 common]$
>
> Hmm. I just used the root1440.bin disk and mounted it up. Not wanting
> to D/L the 20M file, could you check if the root1440.bin disk image
> is included in bf-common.tar.gz (I assume it is) and if so could you
> repeat the steps I went through. I suspect that basetest/common/ may be
> including some very ancient leftovers.
>
root1440.bin is not included explicitly.
[09:19:30 bf]$ tar ztf bf-common.tar.gz
common/
common/base2_2.tgz
common/drivers.tgz
And the contents of common/base2_2.tgz is what seems to me a minimal debian
system: there is all the root directory tree with with programs in it. After
untaring it I got:
[09:23:26 common]$ ls
base2_2.tgz boot dev etc home lib proc sbin usr
bin cdrom drivers.tgz floppy initrd mnt root tmp var
[09:23:28 common]$ ls boot/
boot.b chain.b mbr.b os2_d.b.preserved
boot.b.preserved chain.b.preserved os2_d.b
[09:23:52 common]$ ls bin
ae dd fgrep ls ping setserial true
arch df grep mkdir ping6 sh umount
bash dir gunzip mknod ps sleep uname
cat dmesg gzip mktemp pwd stty uncompress
chgrp dnsdomainname hostname more rbash su vdir
chmod echo kill mount rm sync zcat
chown egrep ln mv rmdir tar
cp false loadkeys netstat run-parts tempfile
date fdflush login pidof sed touch
and so on.
What is this bf-common.tar.gz anyway? Is it a file from which the boot disks
are created by dividing it into the required size?
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