That's right, the GNU version of find will default to the current directory if
none is specified. Have you tried a different kernel?
On Fri, Jun 28, 2002 at 02:40:26PM +1000, Chris Kenrick wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 28, 2002 at 12:22:37AM -0400, Ian D. Stewart wrote:
> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE--
On Fri, Jun 28, 2002 at 12:22:37AM -0400, Ian D. Stewart wrote:
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> On Friday 28 June 2002 00:06, Larry Smith wrote:
> > I've been having trouble with the find utility in
> > Potato.
> >
> > Often, if I run find as root (so I can have permission
>
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On Friday 28 June 2002 00:06, Larry Smith wrote:
> I've been having trouble with the find utility in
> Potato.
>
> Often, if I run find as root (so I can have permission
> to look in all directories), it will run awhile, then
> die with a segmentation
On Thu, Jun 27, 2002 at 09:06:53PM -0700, Larry Smith wrote:
> I've been having trouble with the find utility in
> Potato.
>
> Often, if I run find as root (so I can have permission
> to look in all directories), it will run awhile, then
> die with a segmentation fault.
>
> When this happens, I'm
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