Kevin -- I think Greg is on the right track. Did you use a Linux cp command to copy a database file that was in active use or did you use mupip backup command? The following will not give you a usable copy unless the database is not in use.
If you did indeed make a copy of a database that was open with a Linux cp (or other Linux command), you will need to delete your copy and replace it with a fresh copy made with (a) mupip backup, or (b) the Linux cp command when all processes are out of the database. If this is not the case, let's start troubleshooting in more detail. -- Bhaskar On Sat, 2005-09-17 at 12:11 -0500, Gregory Woodhouse wrote: > Was GT.M running when you did the copy? It sounds as if a region of > shared memory was never released. > > === > Gregory Woodhouse > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > "It is foolish to answer a question that > you do not understand." > --G. Polya ("How to Solve It") ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net email is sponsored by: Tame your development challenges with Apache's Geronimo App Server. Download it for free - -and be entered to win a 42" plasma tv or your very own Sony(tm)PSP. Click here to play: http://sourceforge.net/geronimo.php _______________________________________________ Hardhats-members mailing list Hardhats-members@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/hardhats-members