On Sun, 10 Sep 2000, you wrote:
> I had this problem and I just put imwheel -k in roots
> bash logout file in root's home directory. Not pretty
> I guess but it works.
>
> Dacia
I thought there would be solution like that. How exactly do you do that. I
found roots bash logout file. All it contains is:
# ~/.bash_logout
clear
What "exactly" do you put in that file and where? This is a newbie here!
Thanks
--
Jeff Malka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Registered Linux User 348854
> --- Jeff Malka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > This is very basic but I am having trouble figuring
> > it out.
> >
> > There is a program called imwheel that produces a
> > file called
> > /tmp/imwheel.pid. If I start it as a user I can
> > overwrite imwheel.pid
> > (which I need to do at boot up). If I happen to
> > start imwheel as root, when
> > I boot again as a user, I cannot overwrite the
> > imwheel.pid produced by root
> > unless I become su to delete it first.
> >
> > Is there a way to force imwheel to produce an
> > imwheel.pid that can be
> > overwritten by any user? How?
> >
> > Thank you.
> >
> > Jeff Malka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Registered Linux user 183185
> >
> >
> >
>
>
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--
Jeff Malka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Registered Linux User 348854