04-16-2007, 05:04 PM
If you boot in single user mode (hold the 's' key?), only the startup disk should mount. Then, you can mount the problem disk with 'mount'. (The exact command will depend on your system).
That would be a good time to fsck that disk.
At that point, you should be able to cd to the drive and remove whatever you want.
Easiest thing to do might just be to boot from CD and pave over the disk, then restore from your last backup.
That would be a good time to fsck that disk.
At that point, you should be able to cd to the drive and remove whatever you want.
Easiest thing to do might just be to boot from CD and pave over the disk, then restore from your last backup.