How about installing a well configured firewall? ---------------------------------------- > Date: Sat, 26 Apr 2008 12:26:37 -0500 > From: rogerheflin@xxxxxxxxx > To: fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: fedora 8 hacked? > > tom lee wrote: >> On Sat, Apr 26, 2008 at 9:20 AM, Roger Heflin wrote: >> >>> Because, if you keep writing to a corrupted filesystem you can end up >>> destroying the entire filesystem completely and lose *ALL* of your data and >>> that is worse. >> >> I agree with you. That is why I think the OS should better off with >> reboot "showdown -r -F now" >> instead of mounting as read-only. if there is potencial disk problem, >> you need to run this command anyway no matter what problems you may >> find before rebooting. > > If you automatically reboot, you make the problem go away, but don't have any > details on what happened (cannot log) so it *WILL* happen again, automatically > reboot helps recover from the issue, but results in the loss of all details that > could be used to fix the issue. > >> >>> The problem is that it may or may not crash before it destroys the >>> filesystem competely, and if the OS is written robustly it should not crash >>> just because the filesystem tables are corrupted (and Linux has done some >>> testing with something that puts random data on the filesystem to make sure >>> that it does not crash in those random corrupted data cases). >>> >>> >>>> >>>>> From this perspective, I think microsoft way of crasing is a better >>>>> >>>> design. at least you know some wrong right away and reboot the >>>> computer automatically can get it fixed. >>>> >>> That was not their design, MS tends to try to work around errors rather than >>> report the errors, so if then you get an error, it tries to cope and then >>> you get a completely unrelated cryptic error that really tells you nothing. >>> If if the crash said nothing useful to identify the failing component is it >>> useless, you have no idea what to fix, just crashing tells someone nothing. >>> >>> If you had checked dmesg there should have been a clear error indicating >>> what happened, if all of the partitions on the filesystem were RO then I >>> would suspect that the disk itself quit talking, next time make sure to >>> check dmesg and see what it says. >> >> ok. so it is too late to check since I already rebooted the OS? > > Yeap, too late, if the root filesystem goes RO it does not leave any tracks > except in dmesg. > > I have seen the RO remount a number of times on lots of different HW/kernel/dist > combinations, it is can be any number of issues, from a real hardware issue, a > hardware driver issue, a filesystem driver issue, a bios issue, a main kernel > issue, ... it has a lot of causes. > > If it happens again, type "dmesg" and if possible save it someplace that it not > readonly (type sync a few times to make sure it gets saved-or put it on a flash > driver and if you have another device verify you have it), and then reboot. > > Roger > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself wherever you are. Mobilize! http://www.gowindowslive.com/Mobile/Landing/Messenger/Default.aspx?Locale=en-US?ocid=TAG_APRIL -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list