Michael Jerris wrote: > It means the reason those directories where like that in the file were > because they are based on the locations the rpm puts the files.
Thanks again Mike. I went ahead, created a "freeswitch" user, chowned /usr/local/freeswitch/ recursively, ran /etc/init.d/freeswitch, and the server seems to work OK. One little detail, though, which might be CentOS-specific: Even after editing /etc/password, "ps" shows the user ID instead of the user name: ============ # cat /etc/passwd [...] freeswitch:x:500:500:Freeswitch:/home/freeswitch:/sbin/nologin ============ # /etc/init.d/freeswitch start Starting freeswitch: [ OK ] ============ # ps aux | grep frees 500 3733 24.2 1.3 29404 14360 ? Sl 12:26 0:00 /usr/local/freeswitch/bin/freeswitch -nc root 3762 0.0 0.0 3912 676 pts/3 S+ 12:26 0:00 grep frees ============ Does someone know why "ps" shows the ID instead of the name in column 1? Thank you. -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/-CentOS--Modifying-init-script--tp23151057p23197416.html Sent from the Freeswitch-users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Freeswitch-users mailing list Freeswitch-users@lists.freeswitch.org http://lists.freeswitch.org/mailman/listinfo/freeswitch-users UNSUBSCRIBE:http://lists.freeswitch.org/mailman/options/freeswitch-users http://www.freeswitch.org