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Action<br />

If print jobs are coming out of the printer in question, wait until they are finished<br />

and then resubmit this print job. If you see this message again, the lp(1) system is<br />

probably hung.<br />

See the message "lp hang" for a procedure to clear the queue.<br />

Technical Notes<br />

If lp(1) is unable to create a device for printer messages, the message FIFO could be<br />

already in use, or locked by another print job.<br />

See Also<br />

For more information on the print scheduler, see the section on administrating<br />

printers in the System Administration Guide Volume II.<br />

Can’t invoke /etc/init, error int<br />

Cause<br />

This message can appear while a system is booting, indicating that the init(1M)<br />

program is missing or corrupted. Note that /etc/init is a symbolic link to<br />

/sbin/init.<br />

Action<br />

Boot the miniroot so you can replace init(1M). Halt the machine by typing<br />

Stop-A or by pressing the reset button. Reboot single-user from CD-ROM, the net,<br />

or diskette. For example, type boot cdrom -s at the ok prompt to boot from<br />

CD-ROM. After the system comes up and gives you a # prompt, mount the device<br />

corresponding to the original / partition somewhere, with a command similar to the<br />

mount(1M) command below. Then copy the init(1M) program from the miniroot<br />

to the original / partition, and reboot the system.<br />

# mount /dev/dsk/c0t3d0s0 /mnt<br />

# cp /sbin/init /mnt/sbin/init<br />

# reboot<br />

34 Solaris Common Messages and Troubleshooting Guide ♦ October, 1998

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