Bummer!

Thanks, guys.

Tony

Dan LaMotte wrote:
> You can do
> 
> % newgrp <groupname>
> 
> and the shell that it is executed in will then show the change.
> 
> % groups
> 
> will prove that you are in the group currently.
> 
> But in order for new terminals that you spawn from an X session to have
> the new group you must log out and log back in.  That is correct.
> 
> # - dan lamotte -            - lamotte {at} cs.umn.edu - #####
> ## - systems staff -      - uofm -      - cs department - ####
> ### fpr: 690F C162 4AE5 F85F FE94 88E5 D123 FBAC 0852 A280 ###
> 
> 
> Zac Slade wrote:
> 
>>On Tuesday 11 April 2006 12:57, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
>>
>>>Maybe I'm not doing something right.  From KDE's konsole, I invoked a
>>>new shell with "bash -l" and then ran "id" but it did not reflect the
>>>new group.
>>
>>No you did nothing wrong.  I double checked it and it's as I feared.  You 
>>have 
>>to log out and back in for the changes to be reflected.  Any new logins will 
>>reflect the group change, but not existing ones.   If you ssh into your 
>>system that login will reflect the new group, just as if you logged out and 
>>back into X the changes will be reflected.
>>
>>This is a shortcoming of the Unix strategy for dealing with users.  They are 
>>immutable after they log in.


-- 
Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary
Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
   -- Benjamin Franklin
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