bad filenames
William E. Davidsen Jr
davidsen at steinmetz.ge.com
Thu May 19 06:40:58 AEST 1988
In article <20800 at think.UUCP> barmar at kulla.think.com.UUCP (Barry Margolin) writes:
| In article <14418 at brl-adm.ARPA> rbj at icst-cmr.arpa (Root Boy Jim) writes:
| > From: David Goodenough <dg at lakart.uucp>
| > Since this is a UNIX (tm) group I'm going to ask "how was a file with a '/'
| > in it's name created?" I *_CANT_* do it here (BSD 4.3).
| >
| >By a stray neutrino zapping the directory entry.
Since I posted the original question (and have lots of comments but no
answers) I will note that someone with root access was trying to open
the dir file and treat it as a database, building an index file by <lots
of things>. They blewitt.
| If you use memory and disk without ECC, you deserve to lose this way.
| (Unfortunately, I think most personal computers don't have any memory
| ECC -- users of A/UX should flame heavily at Apple about this.)
Given the low frequency of errors, error detection via parity seems to
work adequately. If I remember correctly, an ECC code for a byte takes 4
bits extra (!), and for four bytes as a unit 6. I don't know how aux
does it, but the PCs have one parity per byte.
--
bill davidsen (wedu at ge-crd.arpa)
{uunet | philabs | seismo}!steinmetz!crdos1!davidsen
"Stupidity, like virtue, is its own reward" -me
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