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Date:      Wed, 31 Mar 2004 20:40:48 +0300
From:      "Toomas Aas" <toomas.aas@raad.tartu.ee>
To:        Ron Joordens <ron.joordens@indec.com.au>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: e2fsprogs install
Message-ID:  <200403311740.i2VHewf1016730@lv.raad.tartu.ee>
In-Reply-To: <11F383396235D511994B00A0C9E1753772123B@INDEC-NTSERVER>

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Hi!

> To have your ext2 and ext3 filesystems fsck'ed correctly without explicitly
> invoking the fsck_ext2fs utility installed by this port you will need to
> create links for the fsck utilities installed by this port in /sbin, e.g.
> 
> ln -f /usr/local/sbin/fsck_ext2fs /sbin/ 2>/dev/null \
>   || install -m755 /usr/local/sbin/fsck_ext2fs /sbin/
> ln -f /usr/local/sbin/e2fsck /sbin/e2fsck 2>/dev/null \
>   || install -m755 /usr/local/sbin/e2fsck /sbin/e2fsck
> 
> In particular, I assume that each of these two commands are meant to be
> entered as one line, 

Correct.

> and has been shown over two lines to fit on the page. 

Correct again.

> I also assume that there is a symbol denoting that the command is
> continued on the next line. But which one? The "\" and the end of the
> first line, or the "|" at the beginning of the second line, or both? 

It's the \. The || is something like a shell "or" operator:
"command1 || command2" means "execute command1, if that fails then 
execute command 2".
--
Toomas Aas | toomas.aas@raad.tartu.ee | http://www.raad.tartu.ee/~toomas/
* If Windows sucked, it would be good for something.



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