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RESCUE(8)		    System Manager's Manual		     RESCUE(8)

NAME
       rescue -- rescue	utilities in /rescue

DESCRIPTION
       The  /rescue  directory	contains  a collection of common utilities in-
       tended for use in recovering a badly damaged system.  With the  transi-
       tion  to	a dynamically-linked root beginning with FreeBSD 5.2, there is
       a real possibility that the standard tools in /bin and /sbin may	become
       non-functional due to a failed upgrade or a disk	error.	The  tools  in
       /rescue are statically linked and should	therefore be more resistant to
       damage.	 However,  being  statically  linked, the tools	in /rescue are
       also less functional than the standard utilities.  In particular,  they
       do not have full	use of the locale, pam(3), and nsswitch	libraries.

       If your system fails to boot, and it shows a prompt similar to:

	     Enter full	pathname of shell or RETURN for	/bin/sh:

       the first thing to try running is the standard shell, /bin/sh.  If that
       fails,  try  running  /rescue/sh, which is the rescue shell.  To	repair
       the system, the root partition  must  first  be	remounted  read-write.
       This can	be done	with the following mount(8) command:

	     /rescue/mount -uw /

       The  next  step	is  to	double-check  the contents of /bin, /sbin, and
       /usr/lib, possibly mounting a FreeBSD rescue or "live file system"  CD-
       ROM  and	copying	files from there.  Once	it is possible to successfully
       run /bin/sh, /bin/ls, and other standard	utilities, try rebooting  back
       into the	standard system.

       The  /rescue  tools  are	 compiled using	crunchgen(1), which makes them
       considerably more compact than the  standard  utilities.	  To  build  a
       FreeBSD	system	where  space is	critical, /rescue can be used as a re-
       placement for the standard /bin and /sbin  directories;	simply	change
       /bin and	/sbin to be symbolic links pointing to /rescue.	 Since /rescue
       is  statically linked, it should	also be	possible to dispense with much
       of /usr/lib in such an environment.

       In contrast to its predecessor /stand, /rescue is updated during	normal
       FreeBSD source and binary upgrades.

FILES
       /rescue	Root of	the rescue hierarchy.

SEE ALSO
       crunchgen(1), crash(8)

HISTORY
       The rescue utilities first appeared in FreeBSD 5.2.

AUTHORS
       The rescue system was written by	Tim  Kientzle  <kientzle@FreeBSD.org>,
       based  on  ideas	 taken	from  NetBSD.  This manual page	was written by
       Simon L.	Nielsen	<simon@FreeBSD.org>, based on  text  by	 Tim  Kientzle
       <kientzle@FreeBSD.org>.

BUGS
       Most  of	 the  rescue tools work	even in	a fairly crippled system.  The
       most egregious exception	is the rescue version  of  vi(1),  which  cur-
       rently  requires	 that  /usr  be	 mounted  so  that  it	can access the
       termcap(5) files.  Hopefully, a failsafe	termcap(3) entry will  eventu-
       ally  be	 added	into the ncurses(3) library, so	that /rescue/vi	can be
       used even in a system where /usr	cannot immediately be mounted.	In the
       meantime, the rescue version of the  ed(1)  editor  can	be  used  from
       /rescue/ed if you need to edit files, but cannot	mount /usr.

FreeBSD	13.2			 June 30, 2022			     RESCUE(8)

NAME | DESCRIPTION | FILES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS | BUGS

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=rescue&manpath=FreeBSD+14.0-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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