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On 23.11.2009 17:38, HighlyCaffeinated wrote:
what does this return ? find /video0
Enough output that I instead chose to `find /video0 > found` to more easily look through it. Careful inspection reveals
those directories are not shown and find produces no errors in the process.
This sounds very odd.
Have you run an fsck on that disk, yet?
Klaus
I have. e2fsck ran against the (unmounted) volume and found no errors. I've never experienced something like this before and to be honest would not believe it if I hadn't seen it. I have successfully copied the sub-directories and data across the network using Windows/Samba, then copied it back to a new folder name. Both played perfectly. I just can't get rid of the original directories. -Todd
On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 10:17 AM, HighlyCaffeinated javatodd32@yahoo.com wrote:
I have. e2fsck ran against the (unmounted) volume and found no errors. I've never experienced something like this before and to be honest would not believe it if I hadn't seen it. I have successfully copied the sub-directories and data across the network using Windows/Samba, then copied it back to a new folder name. Both played perfectly. I just can't get rid of the original directories.
I had something similar happen a long time ago. I can't quite remember how exactly but I had to do something weird to be able to delete the directories. I can at least tell you that I found the answer by googling.
Good luck.