Hi to Everyone,
My old Debian Stretch having crashed after last update, I installed
Bullseye. Most things operate OK after re-installing,
except so far: 'gphoto2' and my Epson Scanner Perfection v500.
I have re-installed the scanner using :
epsonscan2_6.7.43.0-1_amd64.deb and
epsonscan2_non-fre
Hi.
On Tue, 01 Sep 2015 08:27:39 -0600
"D. R. Evans" wrote:
> D. R. Evans wrote on 08/31/2015 01:09 PM:
>
> >> The solution of this problem should be as simple as:
> >>
> >> chgrp adm /var/log/polipo/pol*
> >> rm -f /var/log/polipo/polipo.log.1.gz
> >
> > OK; I have done that, and will let yo
D. R. Evans wrote on 08/31/2015 01:09 PM:
>> The solution of this problem should be as simple as:
>>
>> chgrp adm /var/log/polipo/pol*
>> rm -f /var/log/polipo/polipo.log.1.gz
>
> OK; I have done that, and will let you know tomorrow whether the problem has
> gone away.
>
Yep; no notification fr
Reco wrote on 08/29/2015 12:17 PM:
>
> Your /etc/logrotate.d/polipo should contain this line:
>
> su proxy adm
>
Yep.
[stuff elided]
>
> The solution of this problem should be as simple as:
>
> chgrp adm /var/log/polipo/pol*
> rm -f /var/log/polipo/polipo.log.1.gz
OK; I have done that, an
Hi.
On Sat, 29 Aug 2015 09:43:27 -0600
"D. R. Evans" wrote:
> Ever since the upgrade from wheezy to jessie a few days ago, I have been
> receiving the following every day:
>
>
>
> /etc/cron.daily/logrotate:
> error: error setting owner of /var/log/polipo/polipo.log.1.gz to uid 13 and
> g
On 10/15/2012 09:52 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Mon, 2012-10-15 at 08:46 -0400, Mark Neidorff wrote:
user numbers
I suspect the term should be "user IDs".
If I list my Debian from Arch Linux, it does look like that:
[spinymouse@archlinux ~]$ id
uid=1000(spinymouse) gid=100(users)
groups=100(us
Mark Neidorff wrote:
On Sunday 14 October 2012 11:06:31 am Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I have a HD on my system, sdc1 which has root root ownership. I created
a directory, Apps, to which I gave computation computation ownership
(user). I can create a file in the Apps directory without any problems
Mark Neidorff wrote:
> You are trying to install a RedHat Enterprise Linux package on
> Debian. This can be a problem if the user numbers that Debian and
> Redhat either conflict or if RedHat makes different assumptions about
> user numbers than Debian does. Can you get a Debian package for ecce?
On Mon, 2012-10-15 at 15:56 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Mon, 2012-10-15 at 14:03 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> > > Can you get a Debian package for ecce?
> >
> > According to the Debian package list, the answer is no. (I searched on all
> > versions.)
>
> Perhaps wiki.debian.org/Alien could help.
>
On Mon, 2012-10-15 at 14:03 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> > Can you get a Debian package for ecce?
>
> According to the Debian package list, the answer is no. (I searched on all
> versions.)
Perhaps wiki.debian.org/Alien could help.
Regards,
Ralf
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@li
On Monday 15 October 2012 13:46:03 Mark Neidorff wrote:
> On Sunday 14 October 2012 11:06:31 am Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> > I have a HD on my system, sdc1 which has root root ownership. I created
> > a directory, Apps, to which I gave computation computation ownership
> > (user). I can create a f
On Sunday 14 October 2012 11:06:31 am Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> I have a HD on my system, sdc1 which has root root ownership. I created
> a directory, Apps, to which I gave computation computation ownership
> (user). I can create a file in the Apps directory without any problems
> as the user.
>
Debian 6.0.5(64bit)/KDE4.4.5
I have a HD on my system, sdc1 which has root root ownership. I created
a directory, Apps, to which I gave computation computation ownership
(user). I can create a file in the Apps directory without any problems
as the user.
However, when I try to run an install
On Sat, 2012-10-13 at 12:23 -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> I have edited /etc/fstab and / to account for all of the
> drives. I have two problems for which I would like solutions:
>
> Problem #1. How do I give users on the system access to the drives? At
> this point only root has access p
Debian 6.0.5 (64 bit)/KDE 4.4.5
For reasons lost to antiquity, I have 4 HD's on my system.
Unfortunately, the installer only found one of them, sda1, where the
distribution is installed. Of course, other utilities found all of the
drives and I have edited /etc/fstab and / to account for all o
Tom Roche Thu, 12 Jul 2012 12:59:34 -0400
> me@it:/tmp/gdal$ dget --build
> http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/g/gdal/gdal_1.9.0-3.dsc
> fails at end (after long successful build) with
> > error: could not create '/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/osgeo':
> > Permission denied
> ..
.dsc failed signature check:
> gpg: keyblock resource `/root/.gnupg/secring.gpg': file open error
> gpg: Signature made Tue 05 Jun 2012 09:24:57 AM EDT using DSA key ID E9F2C747
> gpg: fatal: /root/.gnupg: directory does not exist!
> secmem usage: 1408/1408 bytes in 2/2 blocks of pool
Hi, I'm using 2 Debian Squeeze as web server. On server1 I have a folder of
user uploaded data (a Django user media folder to be exact) where
everything belongs to www-data and this user can read write. Now on server2
which is a clone that is used over load balancing I am trying to set up
sshfs via
On 27/05/11 05:18, William Hopkins wrote:
On 05/26/11 at 05:34pm, Alan Chandler wrote:
I have a fairly simple requirement
I am running Debian Unstable on my Desktop and I want to provide a
folder for my Windows 7 laptop to deposit some files.
I thought that the simplest approach would be using
I had that problem and I solved it following these instructions:
- http://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?f=16&t=60620
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 14:46, Rob Owens wrote:
> On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 05:34:28PM +0100, Alan Chandler wrote:
>> I have a fairly simple requirement
>>
>> I am running Debian
On Thu, May 26, 2011 at 05:34:28PM +0100, Alan Chandler wrote:
> I have a fairly simple requirement
>
> I am running Debian Unstable on my Desktop and I want to provide a
> folder for my Windows 7 laptop to deposit some files.
>
> I thought that the simplest approach would be using samba on its
>
On 05/26/11 at 05:34pm, Alan Chandler wrote:
> I have a fairly simple requirement
>
> I am running Debian Unstable on my Desktop and I want to provide a
> folder for my Windows 7 laptop to deposit some files.
>
> I thought that the simplest approach would be using samba on its
> own, but I then d
I have a fairly simple requirement
I am running Debian Unstable on my Desktop and I want to provide a
folder for my Windows 7 laptop to deposit some files.
I thought that the simplest approach would be using samba on its own,
but I then discovered the existance of nautilus-share which should
On Jo, 03 mar 11, 21:29:46, AG wrote:
>
> Doesn't this simply raise an issue though of how many groups a user
> account needs to be manually added to. Is this an issue between
> balancing convenience and security or is this something that is
> counter-intuitive from the userland experience?
AFA
On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 21:29:46 +, AG wrote:
> On 03/03/11 20:59, Lisi wrote:
>>
>> I shall be visiting the computer concerned again in a couple of weeks'
>> time. I'll add user to some more groups then.
>>
>>
>>
> Doesn't this simply raise an issue though of how many groups a user
> accoun
Hi Lisi,
have a look at ls -l /dev/cdrom
to mount /dev/cdrom you need r-x permissions or maybe even rwx, but w
is going to be pretty useless...
Also, /etc/udev/rules.d/ contains rules which device the permissions
of for instance your cdrom,cdrw,sdcard ed
But google a udev manual, itś too extens
On 03/03/11 20:59, Lisi wrote:
I shall be visiting the computer concerned again in a couple of weeks' time.
I'll add user to some more groups then.
Lisi
Doesn't this simply raise an issue though of how many groups a user
account needs to be manually added to. Is this an issue between
On Thursday 03 March 2011 15:28:44 Camaleón wrote:
> On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 14:35:49 +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > I would have tried adding the users to the relevant group if I knew
> > which the relevant group was!
>
> (...)
>
> Not sure if this will help, but on lenny (and GNOME) my user is member
>
On Thu, 03 Mar 2011 14:35:49 +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
(...)
> I have googled the error message, but got no hits:
>
> Your search - Rejected .. ”/usr/sbin/hald “)) - did not match any
> documents.
You googled for the wrong text excerpt ;-)
http://www.google.com/search?q=interface%3D%E2%80
On 3 March 2011 14:35, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> When I try to mount some things (not all - e.g. I can mount one DVDRW
> drive, but not the second in the same machine and with the same user
> and I cannot mount the SD card from the camera; Let alone the
> camera!) I get the following error message:
>
>
When I try to mount some things (not all - e.g. I can mount one DVDRW
drive, but not the second in the same machine and with the same user
and I cannot mount the SD card from the camera; Let alone the
camera!) I get the following error message:
Rejected send message, 3 matched rules; type=”method
On Sun, Jan 24, 2010 at 01:00:13PM +, Anthony Campbell wrote:
> /var/spool/cron/crontabs/ac: Permission denied
The crontabs directory should be owned by root:crontab, not root:root.
> I don't have any such file in /tmp.
Nor should you. /usr/bin/crontab works like sudoedit, and uses temp
fi
Anthony Campbell wrote:
I get an error when running crontab as user:
/var/spool/cron/crontabs/ac: Permission denied
Googling shows a few people with a similar problem but either no
solution or one that doesn't work here (crontab not having setguid or
not in the crontab group).
The permissions
I get an error when running crontab as user:
/var/spool/cron/crontabs/ac: Permission denied
Googling shows a few people with a similar problem but either no
solution or one that doesn't work here (crontab not having setguid or
not in the crontab group).
The permissions are:
drwx-wx--T 2 root ro
On 24 Jan 2010, Anthony Campbell wrote:
Sorry to follow-up to myself but I solved the problem simply by
reinstalling cron. I don't know what had happened previously but anyway
it's now working correctly.
Anthony
--
Anthony Campbell - a...@acampbell.org.uk
Microsoft-free zone - Using Debian GNU
When the date was Tuesday 10 February 2009, Jordi Moles Blanco wrote:
> I'm having a problem trying to execute the "crontab" command from a perl
> script.
>
> When i call this command from the SNMP system, i get this:
>
> "must be privileged to use -u"
>
> the procedure is...
>
> 1. i create a cro
Hi,
I'm having a problem trying to execute the "crontab" command from a perl
script. I'm writing to this list cause the same set up works in another
distro. Now i'm moving to Debian for convenience, but I'm having this
problem i can't fix.
The thing is... I'm using SNMP to automatize some pr
l and then
running the above command using sudo works OK so it's obviously a
permissions problem.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls -l /usr/bin/mail
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 125240 2006-12-04 11:31 /usr/bin/mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls -l /dev/urandom
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 9 2008-01-01 14:32 /dev/urandom
Hi,
I wonder if someone can throw some light on this file-permissions
issue please?
It came to light as rsync complained:
rsync: failed to set times on "/var/www/mirror/foo/.": Operation not permitted
(1)
An strace revealed the failure is effectively a result of:
cd /var/www/mirror/foo; touch -
Hi all -
I run our dept. jabber server, on a mixed woody/testing server.
(I can't take it up to sarge just yet for mysql-related reasons)
Recently, I've started seeing these messages in
/var/log/jabber/error.log for valid user ids:
-
xdb_file failed to open file /var/lib/jabber//.xml:
Permis
> There was a problem in 2.6.8 kernel where a normal user could not burn
> CD's using cdrecord. I experienced that problem and installed 2.6.7,
> which did not suffer that problem. I am wondering, is that problem fixed
> now? I am planning to compile the 2.6.8 kernel source package from Debian.
On Thu, 2004-10-21 at 23:02 +0200, Andreas Janssen wrote:
> Hello
>
> H. S. (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
>
> > There was a problem in 2.6.8 kernel where a normal user could not burn
> > CD's using cdrecord. I experienced that problem and installed 2.6.7,
> > which did not suffer that problem. I a
Hello
H. S. (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> There was a problem in 2.6.8 kernel where a normal user could not burn
> CD's using cdrecord. I experienced that problem and installed 2.6.7,
> which did not suffer that problem. I am wondering, is that problem
> fixed now? I am planning to compile the 2
There was a problem in 2.6.8 kernel where a normal user could not burn
CD's using cdrecord. I experienced that problem and installed 2.6.7,
which did not suffer that problem. I am wondering, is that problem fixed
now? I am planning to compile the 2.6.8 kernel source package from Debian.
thanks,
Hello.
Shot:
> After upgrading X to 4.3.0.dfsg.1-6 yesterday on my workstation
> (Radeon 7500) I can no longer get back to GNOME
It seems something must've changed the ~/.ICEauthority ownership to
root:root and GNOME couldn't read it. After chmodding the file back
to shot:shot everything works o
Hello.
After upgrading X to 4.3.0.dfsg.1-6 yesterday on my workstation (Radeon
7500) I can no longer get back to GNOME - when I try to `startx` I see
the usual, dotted gray X background with the black X cursor for a while
and then I'm dropped back to console. dmesg seems to be appended with
[drm:r
On Sat, 2004-01-31 at 11:02, Scott Ehrlich wrote:
> Here are some of my permissions:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls -la .ICEauthority
> -rw---1 root root 1102 Jan 31 06:19 .ICEauthority
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$
>
This would certainly be a good explanation why a program that runs w
On Sat, 31 Jan 2004, David Clymer wrote:
> On Sat, 2004-01-31 at 06:24, Scott Ehrlich wrote:
>
> > What am I missing?
> >
>
> you're missing some important information...what are the permissions on
> /home/scott/.ICEauthority ?
>
> $ ls -l ~/.ICEauthority
>
> the permissions on mine are 600:
>
> -
On Sat, 2004-01-31 at 06:24, Scott Ehrlich wrote:
> What am I missing?
>
you're missing some important information...what are the permissions on
/home/scott/.ICEauthority ?
$ ls -l ~/.ICEauthority
the permissions on mine are 600:
-rw---1 daviddavid 930 Jan 31 08:06 .ICEaut
Whenever I install a new Debian Woody system, create a normal user
account, then log in as that user, some X-based (and maybe some non-X, but
I don't recall right now) programs work fine, while others require sudo
access.
One example is Mozilla via apt-get. I discovered kword works fine. I
perfo
On Tue, Nov 18, 2003 at 02:16:38AM +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all and excuse my noobitis, but I haven't found the answer to this
> anywhere and it's time for bed.
>
> I'm trying to set up IP masquerading as described at
> http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/IP-Masquerade-HOWTO/. This involves crea
Hi all and excuse my noobitis, but I haven't found the answer to this
anywhere and it's time for bed.
I'm trying to set up IP masquerading as described at
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/IP-Masquerade-HOWTO/. This involves creating and saving a
file called
/etc/rc.d/rc.firewall-2.4, which I'm attempti
On Thursday 02 October 2003 16:57, you wrote:
> I never dreamed that this would be such a difficult problem.I added
> myself to the dip group (perhaps I was already there because the number
> beside my user name (in /etc/group)was 1000. Anyway I added myself to
> pppusers and dialout too. And the v
On Thursday 02 October 2003 17:57, you wrote:
> On Thursday 02 October 2003 16:57, you wrote:
> > I never dreamed that this would be such a difficult problem.I added
> > myself to the dip group (perhaps I was already there because the number
> > beside my user name (in /etc/group)was 1000. Anyway I
Hello
J Y (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I tried some other things like 1) uncommenting the auth line in
> /etc/ppp/options> I tried to apt-get install ppp and the response was
> the current version is the most recent. I ran linuxconf and made sure
> I was in the ppp group-I am.
My Debian syste
Sorry John I some how sent this 1st message toy ou instead of to the
list. I only realized it when the post didn't appear. My apologies.
Quoting John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> J Y writes:
> > Thanks for the help and if anyone has any ideas I still will give it a
> > shot. I'm out of ideas
I tried some other things like 1) uncommenting the auth line in
/etc/ppp/options> I tried to apt-get install ppp and the response was
the current version is the most recent. I ran linuxconf and made sure I
was in the ppp group-I am. I also uncommented debug in /etc/ppp/ttyS4
options. That's my mode
J Y writes:
> Thanks for the help and if anyone has any ideas I still will give it a
> shot. I'm out of ideas.
Run pppconfig as root to configure ppp. Use pon to start the connection
and poff to stop it. If you require a GUI install gpppon.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing
; > > Hope I've got this right.
> > >
> > > cr
> > >
> > > and got this response from internet dialer/kppp:
> > >
> > > Sep 3023:00:23 deblnx ppd(1626): Can't open options file
> > > /etc/ppp/peers/highstream.net: Permissio
Hello
J Y (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> Quoting cr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> I'm no expert at all, but for what it's worth, my file
>> /etc/ppp/peers/orcon is as follows:
>>
>> -rw-r-1 root dip 580 Oct 1 10:28 orcon
>>
>> (I didn't set any of that specially, it was just wh
;call' option with Kppp, just do
> >
> > Setup -> (Orcon Internet) -> Edit -> pppd arguments ->
> > [type in:] call orcon -> Add
> >
> >
> > Hope I've got this right.
> >
> > cr
> >
> > and got this response from in
>
> and got this response from internet dialer/kppp:
>
> Sep 3023:00:23 deblnx ppd(1626): Can't open options file
> /etc/ppp/peers/highstream.net: Permission denied I know that this is a
> permissions problem, now, But I don't know how to fix it. I have tried a
> chm
[type in:] call orcon -> Add
Hope I've got this right.
cr
and got this response from internet dialer/kppp:
Sep 3023:00:23 deblnx ppd(1626): Can't open options file
/etc/ppp/peers/highstream.net: Permission denied I know that this is a
permissions probl
1626): Can't open options file
/etc/ppp/peers/highstream.net: Permission denied I know that this is a
permissions problem, now, But I don't know how to fix it. I have tried a
chmod ug +x on the file 'highstream.net" but that didn't work. I can't
imagine that I need to change p
Shawn Lamson wrote:
> On Sun, July 27 at 12:51 AM EDT
> Andreas Janssen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>I hope you know that being in the disk group as a user can be a severe
>>security risk.It allows you direct read/write access to all your IDE
>>and SCSI hard disk (for example with dd). If you are
On Sun, July 27 at 12:51 AM EDT
Andreas Janssen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Shawn Lamson wrote:
>
>> On Sat, July 26 at 5:49 PM EDT
>> Neal Lippman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>[AutoFS problem]
>
>> I don't use automount but to get proper permissions for my vfat fs's
>i> use this type or entry i
Hello
Shawn Lamson wrote:
> On Sat, July 26 at 5:49 PM EDT
> Neal Lippman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[AutoFS problem]
> I don't use automount but to get proper permissions for my vfat fs's i
> use this type or entry in fstab
> /dev/hdb1 /mnt/win98 vfatdefaults,gid=6,umas
On Sat, 2003-07-26 at 18:06, Shawn Lamson wrote:
> On Sat, July 26 at 5:49 PM EDT
> Neal Lippman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >
>
> I don't use automount but to get proper permissions for my vfat fs's i
> use this type or entry in fstab
> /dev/hdb1 /mnt/win98 vfatdefault
On Sat, July 26 at 5:49 PM EDT
Neal Lippman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Here's my problem, maybe someone can help. I have a usb media reader
>than handles smartmedia, compact flash, etc. It works fine in the sense
>of being able to put media into it and mount the media, using the
>usb-storage mod
Here's my problem, maybe someone can help. I have a usb media reader
than handles smartmedia, compact flash, etc. It works fine in the sense
of being able to put media into it and mount the media, using the
usb-storage module, and copy files off the media. The devices look like
scsi disk drives, as
Title: RE: file permissions problem
Something is changing your permissions and I don't know what so try to investigate on that.
But you may want to look at the attrib command as well
Cheers
-Original Message-
From: Richard Kimber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 10 Dec
I have two accounts on my machine (which is a simple home machine that no
one else uses, except for my wife logging in to retrieve her email).
I have set the permissions on one of the accounts to rwx--x--x (because my
local apache needs execute permission to access files in this account, as
I unde
I've recently installed Woody on a couple of systems (one new-ish laptop,
another dinosaur desktop) and upgraded a few things to testing/unstable, and
noticed that cron doesn't work. In auth.log I see:
Aug 29 17:10:01 joehill cron(pam_unix)[3550]: session opened for user news by (uid=0)
Aug 29 1
Hello. I have a problem, in that I can only run the xatitv program from
gatos as root. If I run it as a normal user, I get an error messages
saying something about not being able to access /dev/mem. I've tried
adding my user to all the groups that seemed relevant, but to no avail.
It seems most
I've written a perl cgi that zips directories of files placed on the
server over netatalk (file sharing for macs).
As the users login as guests to the mac fileshare, the owners of the
directories I want to zip (and then delete the originals) is "nobody".
The owner of the cgi process is www-data.
I have two computers with Debian stable up to date version and smail.
One works fine, but the other gives the following error message in the
smail logfile whenever mail is received. What file is the output file
that it can't open? Working on the assumption that it was the mail
file /var/spool/ma
Hello all,
does anyone know how to get apache to read userfiles
I.E.
/home/user/www
Without having to chmod on them first?
Its really a pain in the butt to have to go in and
chmod the files to allow apache to access them every
time you update the files..
Your all knowing wisdom is appreciated.
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