Funky. What's the msec SECURE_LEVEL? cat /etc/sysconfig/msec. If it's 4
or 5, that's a damn good place to start looking.

On Mon, 2003-07-28 at 12:14, Ryan Hanlon wrote:
> I installed 9.1 a few weeks ago, and just recently discovered that 
> non-root users can't run perl scripts.  If I run any script with 
> #!/usr/bin/perl in the first line, I get something like this:
> 
> -bash: ./test.pl: /usr/bin/perl: bad interpreter: Permission denied
> 
> 
> The script itself is executable, and permissions are correct on Perl.
> (/usr/bin/perl is a link to perl5, which is a link to 5.8.0, which is 755)
> 
> There are no \r's or other odd characters in the shebang line.
> 
> There are no acl's set on any of /usr/bin/perl* or the parent directories.
> 
> Any normal user can execute /usr/bin/perl somescript.pl, but can't run 
> somescript.pl by itself.
> 
> 
> If this is a problem with the default Mandrake setup then I'm sure the 
> question has been asked before, but I haven't found any suggestions on 
> Google except the usual things above.  Is there anything else that can 
> cause this?  Maybe extra restrictions set in kernel-secure?  I can't 
> imagine why someone would think that's a security feature.  And for the 
> bonus question, how can I undo whatever it is that prevents users from 
> running perl normally?
> 
> Appreciate any thoughts.
> 
> Ryan
> 
> 
> 
> ______________________________________________________________________
> 
> Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
> Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
-- 
Jack Coates
Monkeynoodle: A Scientific Venture...


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
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