Help. Cygwin corrupting files

Andrew DeFaria Andrew@DeFaria.com
Mon Feb 12 15:16:00 GMT 2007


Chuck wrote:
> Andrew DeFaria wrote:
>> Chuck wrote:
>>> At first I thought my recent problems with cygwin were limited to the
>>> occasional "ls" command listing nothing. Run it again an it works
>>> (usually). Now the problems are getting worse. I tried to "rm" a file
>>> that I own and it didn't fully delete it. It corrupted it. An ls of the
>>> file shows this (that is, when the ls command works).
>>>
>>> $ ls -l
>>> ls: cannot access bin_dirs.txt: No such file or directory
>>> total 14
>>> drwxr-xr-x+ 2 CHamilto Domain Users 0 Feb 9 14:50 ./
>>> drwxr-xr-x+ 19 CHamilto Domain Users 0 Feb 9 14:33 ../
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 CHamilto Domain Users 3196 Feb 9 14:48 all_bin_dirs.txt
>>> ??????????? ? ? ? ? ? bin_dirs.txt
>>> -rwx------ 1 CHamilto Domain Users 368 Feb 9 14:33 chuck.sh*
>>> -rwxrwx--- 1 CHamilto Domain Users 3069 Feb 9 11:06 cleanup_rman.sh*
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 CHamilto Domain Users 1491 Feb 9 14:08 servers
>>> -rwxrwx--- 1 CHamilto Domain Users 270 Feb 9 14:50 upload.sh*
>>>
>>>
>>> What is up with that? I can't access or remove the bin_dirs.txt file now
>>> with either cygwin or windows. I tried resetting the owner but chown
>>> fails too.
>>>
>>> $ chown "CHamilto:Domain Users" bin_dirs.txt
>>> chown: cannot access `bin_dirs.txt': No such file or directory
>>>
>>>
>>> I have tried reinstalling cygwin and coreutils to no avail. Did
>>> something happen in a recent release of cygwin to explain this bizarre
>>> behavior? I've been using cygwin for years and never experienced
>>> anything like this. Please help!
>> When I've seen this problem before (ls complaining file doesn't exist)
>> it is usually because some other process has the file handle still open.
>> Go to sysinternals.com and download and run Process Explorer. It has a
>> facility to search for "handles" by strings. Search for "bin_dirs.txt"
>> and find which process has that file open and either close the file
>> handle or kill the process. Return the bash shell and repeat the ls. You
>> should see no problem anymore.
>
> It's not just *a* file. I'm trying to "ls" entire directories. Sometimes
> I get nothing listed. Sometimes I get all the files listed. Sometimes I
> get some of them. One strange thing is that I never see the last line of
> output showing a partially filled line. It's always a complete line
> which makes me think that maybe its the writing to stdout that's failing.
>
>
At this point I'd suggest SpinRite: http://www.grc.com/sr/spinrite.htm
-- 
Andrew DeFaria <http://defaria.com>
One reason most people play golf is to wear clothes they wouldn't be 
caught dead in otherwise.


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