This classic article from Mario Wolczko first appeared on Usenet in 1986.
Have you ever left your terminal logged in, only to find when you came
back to it that a (supposed) friend had typed rm -rf ~/*
and was
hovering over the keyboard with threats along the lines of "lend me a fiver
'til Thursday, or I hit return"? Undoubtedly the person in question would not
have had the nerve to inflict such a trauma upon you, and was doing it in
jest. So you've probably never experienced the worst of such disasters
[...].
It was a quiet Wednesday afternoon. Wednesday, 1st October, 15:15 BST, to
be precise, when Peter, an office-mate of mine, leaned away from his terminal
and said to me, "Mario, I'm having a little trouble sending mail." Knowing
that msg
was capable of confusing even the most capable of
people, I sauntered over to his terminal to see what was wrong. A strange
error message of the form (I forget the exact details) cannot access
/foo/bar for userid 147
had been issued by msg
. My first
thought was "Who's userid 147?; the sender of the message, the destination,
or what?" So I leant over to another terminal, already logged in, and
typed
grep 147 /etc/passwd
only to receive the response
/etc/passwd: No such file or directory.
Instantly, I guessed that something was amiss. This was confirmed when in response to
ls /etc
I got
ls: not found.
I suggested to Peter that it would be a good idea not to try anything for a while, and went off to find our system manager.
When I arrived at his office, his door was ajar, and within ten seconds I realised what the problem was. James, our manager, was sat down, head in hands, hands between knees, as one whose world has just come to an end. Our newly-appointed system programmer, Neil, was beside him, gazing listlessly at the screen of his terminal. And at the top of the screen I spied the following lines:
# cd
# rm -rf *
Oh, shit, I thought. That would just about explain it.
I can't remember what happened in the succeeding minutes; my memory is
just a blur. I do remember trying ls
(again), ps
,
who
and maybe a few other commands beside, all to no avail. The
next thing I remember was being at my terminal again (a multi-window graphics
terminal), and typing
cd /
echo *
I owe a debt of thanks to David Korn for making echo
a
built-in of his shell; needless to say, /bin
, together with
/bin/echo
, had been deleted. What transpired in the next few
minutes was that /dev
, /etc
and /lib
had also gone in their entirety; fortunately Neil had interrupted
rm
while it was somewhere down below /news
, and
/tmp
, /usr
and /users
were all
untouched.
Meanwhile James had made for our tape cupboard and had retrieved what
claimed to be a dump tape of the root filesystem, taken four weeks earlier.
The pressing question was, "How do we recover the contents of the tape?". Not
only had we lost /etc/restore
, but all of the device entries for
the tape deck had vanished. And where does mknod
live? You
guessed it, /etc
. How about recovery across Ethernet of any of
this from another VAX? Well, /bin/tar
had gone, and thoughtfully
the Berkeley people had put rcp
in /bin
in the 4.3
distribution. What's more, none of the Ether stuff wanted to know without
/etc/hosts
at least. We found a version of cpio
in
/usr/local
, but that was unlikely to do us any good without a
tape deck.
Alternatively, we could get the boot tape out and rebuild the root filesystem, but neither James nor Neil had done that before, and we weren't sure that the first thing to happen would be that the whole disk would be re-formatted, losing all our user files. (We take dumps of the user files every Thursday; by Murphy's Law this had to happen on a Wednesday). Another solution might be to borrow a disk from another VAX, boot off that, and tidy up later, but that would have entailed calling the DEC engineer out, at the very least. We had a number of users in the final throes of writing up PhD theses and the loss of a maybe a weeks' work (not to mention the machine down time) was unthinkable.
So, what to do? The next idea was to write a program to make a device
descriptor for the tape deck, but we all know where cc
,
as
and ld
live. Or maybe make skeletal entries for
/etc/passwd
, /etc/hosts
and so on, so that
/usr/bin/ftp
would work. By sheer luck, I had a
gnuemacs
still running in one of my windows, which we could use
to create passwd
, etc., but the first step was to create a
directory to put them in. Of course /bin/mkdir
had gone, and so
had /bin/mv
, so we couldn't rename /tmp
to
/etc
. However, this looked like a reasonable line of attack.
By now we had been joined by Alasdair, our resident UNIX guru, and as luck
would have it, someone who knows VAX assembler. So our plan became this:
write a program in assembler which would either rename /tmp
to
/etc
, or make /etc
, assemble it on another VAX,
uuencode it, type in the uuencoded file using my gnu, uudecode it (some
bright spark had thought to put uudecode
in
/usr/bin
), run it, and hey presto, it would all be plain sailing
from there. By yet another miracle of good fortune, the terminal from which
the damage had been done was still su
'd to root
(su
is in /bin
, remember?), so at least we stood a
chance of all this working.
Off we set on our merry way, and within only an hour we had managed to
concoct the dozen or so lines of assembler to create /etc
. The
stripped binary was only 76 bytes long, so we converted it to hex (slightly
more readable than the output of uuencode), and typed it in using my editor.
If any of you ever have the same problem, here's the hex for future
reference:
070100002c000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
0000dd8fff010000dd8f27000000fb02ef07000000fb01ef070000000000bc8f
8800040000bc012f65746300
I had a handy program around (doesn't everybody?) for converting ASCII hex
to binary, and the output of /usr/bin/sum
tallied with our
original binary. But hang on---how do you set execute permission without
/bin/chmod
? A few seconds thought (which as usual, lasted a
couple of minutes) suggested that we write the binary on top of an already
existing binary, owned by me [...] problem solved.
So along we trotted to the terminal with the root
login,
carefully remembered to set the umask
to 0 (so that I could
create files in it using my gnu), and ran the binary. So now we had a
/etc
, writable by all. From there it was but a few easy steps to
creating passwd
, hosts
, services
,
protocols
, (etc), and then ftp
was willing to play
ball. Then we recovered the contents of /bin
across the ether
(it's amazing how much you come to miss ls after just a few, short hours),
and selected files from /etc
. The key file was
/etc/restore
, with which we recovered /dev
from the
dump tape, and the rest is history.
Now, you're asking yourself (as I am), what's the moral of this story?
Well, for one thing, you must always remember the immortal words, DON'T
PANIC. Our initial reaction was to reboot the machine and try everything as
single user, but it's unlikely it would have come up without
/etc/init
and /bin/sh
. Rational thought saved us
from this one.
The next thing to remember is that UNIX tools really can be put to unusual
purposes. Even without my gnuemacs
, we could have survived by
using, say, /usr/bin/grep
as a substitute for
/bin/cat
.
And the final thing is, it's amazing how much of the system you can delete
without it falling apart completely. Apart from the fact that nobody could
login (/bin/login
?), and most of the useful commands had gone,
everything else seemed normal. Of course, some things can't stand life
without say /etc/termcap
, or /dev/kmem
, or
/etc/utmp
, but by and large it all hangs together.
I shall leave you with this question: if you were placed in the same situation, and had the presence of mind that always comes with hindsight, could you have got out of it in a simpler or easier way? Answers on a postage stamp to:
Mario Wolczko
Last updated: Sun Jun 27 17:00:19 PDT 2004
URL: http://geocities.datacellar.net/krishna_kunchith/misc/rm.html