Thanks Pete; Tried your suggestion with the same results. Went to Debian on /dev/hda2 and did the following: e2fsck /dev/hdb Couldn't find ext2 super-block while trying to open /dev/hdb. The super-block could not be read or does not describe a correct ext2 filesystem. If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2 filesystem (and not swap or ufs or something else), then the super-block is corrupt, and you might try running e2fsck with an alternate super-block: e2fsck -b 8193 Tried the alternate super-block with no success. Guess it will be a re-install after all. Clay Pete Buechler wrote: > On Saturday 06 January 2001 08:26 am, Clayton Stapleton wrote: > >>> Hi Folks; >> >> My SuSE 6.4 partition has developed a problem, When I start the SuSE >> partition >> I get the following: >> /dev/hdb1 clean, 24/5040 files, 3179/20128 blocks failed >> Loading keymap qwerty/us.map.gz failed >> >> fsck failed. Please repair manually and reboot. The root file >> system is currently >> mounted read-onle. To remount it read-write do: >> bash#mount -n -o remount, rw / >> >> I have not a clue on how to correct this problem. If it is not a >> simple correction >> then I will re-install SuSE 6.4. >> TIA >> Clay Stapleton > > > Before you re-install, try to login as root and then type > > fsck.ext2 /dev/hdb1 > > It will find problems in the disk and ask you if you want to fix them. > Say "yes" as many times as necessary. When you are done logout by > typing CTRL-D and the computer will reboot. Hopefully all will be well. > > BTW, for SuSE specific questions, you could joing the suse-linux-e > mailing list, or if you do not want to be bothered with the constant > deluge of mail on that list then you can search the archives. Sign up > at: > > http://www.suse.com/us/support/mailinglists/index.html > > Search the archives at: > > http://lists.suse.com/archives/suse-linux-e/