I've got a friend using one of my Debian machines to learn Perl. Tonight he started with the universal "Hello world" script. It seems to work great when run locally, but gives the following command when you attempt to run it on a local machine while the file is located on a separate computer connected by NFS.
bash: /mnt/path/to/helloscript: /usr/bin/perl: bad interpreter: Permission denied Both the machines are running Debian Woody, with all security updates installed. The client is a Pentium 133 w/64mb of ram, running kernel 2.2.19. The file server is a 1Ghz AMD T-Bird w/768mb of ram, running kernel 2.4.18. The permissions on the file are -rwxr-xr-x, regardless of which computer it's saved on at the time. The only difference is it's owned by a different user and group. Does anyone have any suggestions that would allow this to work? TIA, Jacob ----- GnuPG Key: 1024D/16377135 In a world without fences, who needs Gates? http://www.linux.org/
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