On Wednesday 11 Nov 2015 09:37:36 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Nov 2015 08:09:04 +0200, Ran Shalit wrote:
> > After doing a reset, I can't login.
> > on trying to enter password I get for a second a screen which
> > "This is gentoo unkown_domain", and then it get back to the login
> > screen.
On Wed, 11 Nov 2015 08:09:04 +0200, Ran Shalit wrote:
> After doing a reset, I can't login.
> on trying to enter password I get for a second a screen which
> "This is gentoo unkown_domain", and then it get back to the login
> screen. I login using tty (alt_ctrl+f1) and changed the user password,
>
15 Ran Shalit wrote:
> After doing a reset, I can't login.
> On trying to enter password I get for a second a screen with
> "This is gentoo unkown_domain", and then it get back to the login screen.
> I login using tty (alt_ctrl+f1) and changed the user password,
> but on trying to login again i
Hello,
After doing a reset, I can't login.
on trying to enter password I get for a second a screen which
"This is gentoo unkown_domain", and then it get back to the login screen.
I login using tty (alt_ctrl+f1) and changed the user password, but on
trying to login again in the graphic logic, it ke
On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 15:43:49 +0800
Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> Hi, here is the root infomation in my /etc/passwd:
> root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
Looks okay, can't see anything wrong in bash configs, too.
> I got the login information below from the tail of /var/log/messages:
...
I believe this cl
HI, thanks!
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 3:11 PM, Mike Kazantsev
wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 13:15:12 +0800
> Chuanwen Wu wrote:
>
>> Could you please give more details? How to change it to something
>> default?
>
> Well, that's pretty much the basics...
> Shells for each system user are defined in
On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 13:15:12 +0800
Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> Could you please give more details? How to change it to something
> default?
Well, that's pretty much the basics...
Shells for each system user are defined in /etc/passwd, which should be
edited by 'vipw' command.
What I've meant is the ca
Hi, thanks!
> Looks like the system is unable to launch a shell for some reason,
> prehaps you can change it to something default, like /bin/sh, or just
> something else if it's bash already.
Could you please give more details? How to change it to something default?
>
> Also, I'd double-check the
On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 13:42:03 +0500, Mike Kazantsev wrote:
> Looks like the system is unable to launch a shell for some reason,
> prehaps you can change it to something default, like /bin/sh, or just
> something else if it's bash already.
Could it also be something in the bash profile causing the
On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 16:28:35 +0800
Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> which file has "mod_access" ?
I have it in '/etc/pam.d/system-login', which is included for both
local and remote connections, but I could've added it myself.
> Now it don't prompt the "Password:"
Looks like the system is unable to launch
Hi, thanks!
> If you have pam on your system, then it broken
> '/etc/pam.d/system-local-login' might be the cause, as well as
> user-specific files there.
> And if that's not the case, try commenting out pam modules like
> mod_access, which can add additional access restrictions.
which file has "mo
On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 12:41:17 +0800
Chuanwen Wu wrote:
> My gentoo worked very well in the past two years. But today I found
> that I can't login it from the terminal, but ssh login is OK.
If you have pam on your system, then it broken
'/etc/pam.d/system-local-login' might be the cause, as well a
Hi, thanks!
> man securetty
/*/
# cat /etc/securetty
# /etc/securetty: list of terminals on which root is allowed to login.
# See securetty(5) and login(1).
console
vc/0
vc/1
vc/2
vc/3
vc/4
vc/5
vc/6
vc/7
vc/8
vc/9
vc/10
vc/11
vc/12
tty0
tty1
tty2
tty3
tty4
tty5
tt
* Chuanwen Wu (wcw8...@gmail.com) [12.02.09 05:41]:
> Hi,
> My gentoo worked very well in the past two years. But today I found
> that I can't login it from the terminal, but ssh login is OK.
>
> Have anybody ever encountered this problem?
> Any help will be appreciate!
>
man securetty
HTH
Seba
Hi,
My gentoo worked very well in the past two years. But today I found
that I can't login it from the terminal, but ssh login is OK.
I have written down the login message:
/*/
This is Gentoo-Server.unknown_domain (Linux i686 2.6.26-gentoo-r1) 12:22:39
Gentoo-Se
Abraham Marín Pérez escribió:
4) The file system is mounted noexec.
(So, make sure that you filesystem is currently mounted exec.)
As stated earlier, there is no noexec flag:
/dev/sda2 on / type ext3 (rw,noatime)
Just blind-shooting but still here are my 0.02$... could it
4) The file system is mounted noexec.
(So, make sure that you filesystem is currently mounted exec.)
As stated earlier, there is no noexec flag:
/dev/sda2 on / type ext3 (rw,noatime)
Just blind-shooting but still here are my 0.02$... could it be possible
that you h
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 14:30:39 -0500
"Boyd Stephen Smith Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My locally installed man page doesn't provide any other explanations for that
> return code, so I'm still betting it's one of those things. However, someone
> more skilled than I might be able to spend some
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Jan-Hendrik Zab wrote:
>> On my system:
>> $ ls -ld /
>> drwxr-xr-x 23 root root 664 2007-06-11 20:27 /
>
> That's due to the ZSH settings/command.
So, we are sure that /bin/zsh is not being run from a chrooted environment or
something?
- --
Art
On Tuesday 19 June 2007 14:03:20 Jan-Hendrik Zab wrote:
> I really dislike this problem :D
/me agrees.
My locally installed man page doesn't provide any other explanations for that
return code, so I'm still betting it's one of those things. However, someone
more skilled than I might be able to
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 13:17:57 -0500
"Boyd Stephen Smith Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
> According to http://www.die.net/doc/linux/man/man2/execve.2.html EACCES is
> only returned by this function for a few reasons:
>
> 1) Search permission is denied on a component of the path prefix of f
On Tuesday 19 June 2007 12:27:10 Jan-Hendrik Zab wrote:
> 'strace -f su - jonsnow':
>
> [pid 4117] execve("/bin/zsh", ["-su"], [/* 6 vars */]) =
> -1 EACCES (Permission denied)
Note that the trace clearly shows that /bin/zsh isn't returning an error code
(in which case pid 4117 would immediatel
Hi,
My friend had a problem, similar to yours.
He could not login as normal user.
In his system something happened and the permission of /usr/bin /bin and
in some other directories changed to dr-x--
Restoring their permissions to drwxr-xr-x sovled his problem.
I do not know, this could hel
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 18:34:15 +0200
Hans-Werner Hilse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > The permissions of /bin seem to be okay:
> >
> > drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 2007-06-19 14:53 bin/
>
> Hm, and / ?
>
> I think PAM is alright, the log messages you posted indicate that a
> session _was_ ope
Am Dienstag, 19. Juni 2007 schrieb Jan-Hendrik Zab:
> On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 17:58:17 +0200
>
> Dirk Heinrichs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Did you try to fsck the / fs?
>
> Yes, I did. There were no problems at all.
Would have been too easy :-)
> Claws appends that automatically ('-- ') and it's
Hi,
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 16:39:19 +0200
Jan-Hendrik Zab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The permissions of /bin seem to be okay:
>
> drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 2007-06-19 14:53 bin/
Hm, and / ?
I think PAM is alright, the log messages you posted indicate that a
session _was_ opened, so it
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 17:58:17 +0200
Dirk Heinrichs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Did you try to fsck the / fs?
Yes, I did. There were no problems at all.
> > --
>
> Sig. should be separated with "-- ", not "--".
Claws appends that automatically ('-- ') and it's not only the right
string but also
Hi,
Did you try to fsck the / fs?
> --
Sig. should be separated with "-- ", not "--".
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 15:20:31 +0200
Hans-Werner Hilse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> - noexec partition (unlikely, since more or less nothing would work), or
> - PAM getting angry, maybe because your /etc/shells doesn't contain the
> shells?
>
> If it's none of these, check the system log. PAM sho
Hi,
On Tue, 19 Jun 2007 14:53:44 +0200 Jan-Hendrik Zab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey,
> for a few days now I'm unable to log in to my PC[0] with a normal user
> (root works just fine). The following error is printed:
>
> /bin/zsh: Permission denied
- noexec partition (unlikely, s
Jan-Hendrik Zab escribió:
Hey,
for a few days now I'm unable to log in to my PC[0] with a normal user
(root works just fine). The following error is printed:
/bin/zsh: Permission denied
The same happens when I try it with a user that has /bin/bash as the
default shell. The permi
Hey,
for a few days now I'm unable to log in to my PC[0] with a normal user
(root works just fine). The following error is printed:
/bin/zsh: Permission denied
The same happens when I try it with a user that has /bin/bash as the
default shell. The permissions for both files are:
On Wednesday 13 June 2007 03:38:58 Johannes Skov Frandsen wrote:
> I have installed Courier-imap on my server and I'm trying to test it,
> which is not going that well...
>
> When I try to telnet in to it I can connect but I can't log in.
>
> Am I using the right commands when I test?
Yes, but you
Hi,
On Wed, 13 Jun 2007 10:38:58 +0200 Johannes Skov Frandsen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have installed Courier-imap on my server and I'm trying to test it,
> which is not going that well...
>
> When I try to telnet in to it I can connect but I can't log in.
>
> Am I using the right command
I have installed Courier-imap on my server and I'm trying to test it,
which is not going that well...
When I try to telnet in to it I can connect but I can't log in.
Am I using the right commands when I test?
This is the output from telnet
telnet 127.0.0.1 imap
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to
Well, it's back. I booted the LiveCD - I emerged pam again, ran
revdep-rebuild, depscan.sh and now I can login again. However, it still
tells me it can't calculate module dependencies so I ran depscan.sh and
depmod -a after booting to the main system.
Thanks. to you and Zac.
Mike Williams
On the reboot I was also told to run depscan.sh - if I can get in I'll
try that too.
Zac Medico wrote:
Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
This is complicated by the fact I have to do it all via liveCD as I
can't login - nothing is accepted.
The following was done after chrooting.
There was no afs i
Still broken. I did emerge findutils as it was flagged with the
newuse. After rebooting still can't get in. I'll emerge pam under the
livecd and then revdep again and see what happens.
Zac Medico wrote:
Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
This is complicated by the fact I have to do it all via liv
Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
This is complicated by the fact I have to do it all via liveCD as I
can't login - nothing is accepted.
The following was done after chrooting.
There was no afs in the use flag and I put -afs in /etc/make.conf .
You can probably log in now that you remerged pam. Like
When I was logged in I tried that and it did not work. Said nothing
needed fixing. I'm on the LiveCD now so I'll do that with a -p and see
what happens.
Mike Williams wrote:
On Sunday 17 July 2005 01:33, Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
How do I get the system so it's not looking for the pam_af
This is complicated by the fact I have to do it all via liveCD as I
can't login - nothing is accepted.
The following was done after chrooting.
There was no afs in the use flag and I put -afs in /etc/make.conf .
At this point findutils is the only one being rebuilt. We'll see what
happens.
On Sunday 17 July 2005 01:33, Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
> How do I get the system so it's not looking for the pam_afs file?
revdep-rebuild
--
Mike Williams
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
Yesterday I removed openafs as I haven't used it for ages. However, now
I can not login as and the system won't start properly (netmount and
those depending on it don't run). I get messages about not being able
to find /usr/afsws/pam_afs.so.1 - shared library can not b
I'd like to keep pam if I could.
Jerry McBride wrote:
On Saturday 16 July 2005 08:33 pm, Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
Yesterday I removed openafs as I haven't used it for ages. However, now
I can not login as and the system won't start properly (netmount and
those depending on it don't run). I
On Saturday 16 July 2005 08:33 pm, Brett I. Holcomb wrote:
> Yesterday I removed openafs as I haven't used it for ages. However, now
> I can not login as and the system won't start properly (netmount and
> those depending on it don't run). I get messages about not being able
> to find /usr/afsws/
Yesterday I removed openafs as I haven't used it for ages. However, now
I can not login as and the system won't start properly (netmount and
those depending on it don't run). I get messages about not being able
to find /usr/afsws/pam_afs.so.1 - shared library can not be found.
I've googled o
Thanks for this information. It helped to solve my problem. :)
Uwe
Daniel Drake wrote:
> Sean Higgins wrote:
>
>>Did you recently update your kernel? There is a problem with
>>gentoo-sources-2.6.12-r4. There is a bug in iptables that causes problems
>>with KDE logins. If you stop iptables,
On Tuesday 12 July 2005 18:23, Zac Medico wrote:
> Yuval Scharf wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm using KDE 3.4.
> > Since few days ago I can't login using KDM.
> > The login process can't pass the "initializing peripherals" stage.
> > I can see that there are two processes running kded (one of the is the
Hello Daniel,
> Just to clarify, this is a problem with all 2.6.12 releases (not just
> -gentoo-r4)
Thanks for the information. I only became aware of the issue when -gentoo-r4
became stable.
Sean
--
Sean Higgins, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.systura.com - "Where infor
Sean Higgins wrote:
> Did you recently update your kernel? There is a problem with
> gentoo-sources-2.6.12-r4. There is a bug in iptables that causes problems
> with KDE logins. If you stop iptables, your login will work.
Just to clarify, this is a problem with all 2.6.12 releases (not just
Did you recently update your kernel? There is a problem with
gentoo-sources-2.6.12-r4. There is a bug in iptables that causes problems
with KDE logins. If you stop iptables, your login will work.
If you upgrade to gentoo-sources-2.6.12-r5, the problem will be solved.
Check etc-update to see if there any config files that need to be updated.
Simon Windsor wrote:
Hi
Check the permissions on
/dev/null
If these are not
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 3 Jul 11 19:32 /dev/null
then please run
env-update && source /etc/profile && etc-update
All the best
Simon
Hi
Check the permissions on
/dev/null
If these are not
crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 3 Jul 11 19:32 /dev/null
then please run
env-update && source /etc/profile && etc-update
All the best
Simon
On Tuesday 12 July 2005 16:23, Zac Medico wrote:
> Yuval Scharf wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm using KD
Yuval Scharf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using KDE 3.4.
> Since few days ago I can't login using KDM.
> The login process can't pass the "initializing peripherals" stage.
> I can see that there are two processes running kded (one of the is the father
> of the other) which I can't kill.
> After rebootin
Hi,
I'm using KDE 3.4.
Since few days ago I can't login using KDM.
The login process can't pass the "initializing peripherals" stage.
I can see that there are two processes running kded (one of the is the father
of the other) which I can't kill.
After rebooting the machine I can login once and t
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