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Read and write permission is required on the specified filesystem device. The inode becomes allocatable.
The primary purpose of this command is to remove a file which, for some reason, does not appear in a directory. If you use clri to destroy an inode which does appear in a directory, track down the entry and remove it. Otherwise, when the inode is reallocated to some new file, the old entry will still point to this file. At that point, removing the old entry will destroy the new file. The new entry will again point to an unallocated inode, so the whole cycle is likely to be repeated.
filesystems, use clri with extreme caution as
it may cause the kernel to panic. If used, be sure to run fsck on the filesystem afterwards.
This utility does not work on DOS filesystems.