On Tue, 21 Oct 2003 14:33:59 +0100, norm wrote:
>
>>You know, now that you mention is, I seem to recall that it wanted
>>to
>>replace mine once too. Luckily I caught it ! This is one thing
>>where
>>Gentoo's package system needs work. With RPM or APT, it always
>>backs up
>>your current file(s) and appends a meaningful name to it.
>>
>
>I agree, If I had been a complete newbie I would have really
>panicked
>and probably went back to Mandrake (god forbid).


It's funny that you mention that. I'm not a newbie to Linux but I was
to gentoo some months back when I did my first update and was told
(nicely, of course! :-))to do an etc-update. Well, I never dreamed
that /etc/fstab would be overwritten. Duh, this was my oversight, of
course, I'm not blaming anyone.  But I didn't catch it so when gentoo
wouldn't boot, I thought the system had given up the ghost. I
reinstalled gentoo. I believe I must have had a lot of free time back
then. :-) Had I caught it, I could have simply corrected the
/etc/fstab overwrite and things would have been fine. I didn't go
back to Mandrake, however. :-))). It happened again, but the second
time, I was more careful. I agree with what someone said earlier, is
it really necessary to even offer to change /etc/fstab??





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