sudo rm -rf / in OS X
This is what happens when you invoke sudo rm -rf / in Terminal.app as Mac OS X is actively running. Some unusual behavior occurs as the OS swallows its own tail which can be seen toward the end of the video.
Canal: Howto & Style
Añadido: December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm
Autor: dell1032
Duración: 08:19
Puntuación: 3.83
Reproducciones: 36056
Etiquetas: 2 Apple Core Duo G3 G4 G5 Intel Jobs Leopard Linux Mac MacBook OS PowerBook Pro Rosa Santa Steve Terminal Tiger UNIX X
Comentarios
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enjoyash (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
yes. in debian and distros based on debian, recent versions, rm -rf / has benn modified like this:root@host ~# rm -rf /rm: cannot remove root directory `/'
thomashome05 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
I deleted the Finder by accident! WOW that was cool if they was no apps running the menu bar goes away. Then I deleted the dock I had to do it with terminal because no finder. Then I had nothing but a wallpaper unless I launched a App then I had to go and reinstall.
brainac0cult (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
linux is more interesting when you do sudo rm -rf /
landmark41 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
And I thought the OS X didn't clug up with all kinds of stuff like Windows does..I've heard that you doesn't have to format OS X either.Seems as though the fanboys aren't very reliable in their statements.
luckadletz (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
i love linux. so much better
m00kie12 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
the flashing folder isn't part of the os, it's on the computer itself.
HauntHouse (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
You are quite right. But someone asked about windows and it does more or less the same, massive loss of data. It's not the total equivalent, I know that.Sometimes I hit reply but youtube doesn't post the comment to the post I replied to.
BigBrightBlueBox (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
this is impossible to watch this guy's shitty filming.
Steven707 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
1: there is no C drive in Unix-like OSs2: formatting is creating a new filesystem on a partition. rm -r / just deletes the / directory.
AlecTBM (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
Mac OS X IS an *nix version ;)
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