Suse10 uses Udev as a control to the devices and creates them each time the
system boots. Thus the mode and ownership is lost on shutdown. What you need
to do is create an entry for udev to use to create a static device for you
so that it will remain constant.
I am not sure how Suse handles it but Redhat uses a folder in
/etc/udev/devices to store a copy of the desired device that udev will
create on boot up with needed permissions.
So the real issue is that you were in the wrong FM. Don't feel bad, it took
me several hours to figure it out.
Doug
----- Original Message -----
From: "Rich Osman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2006 8:16 PM
Subject: [Nut-upsuser] How to get serial port ownership to survive reboot
I'll read TFM, but I can't find it.
My nut install is working fine now that Kjell pointed out my case error
and I finished configging it. The only problem that remains is that the
serial port mode and ownership gets reset on reboot.
I've Googled everything I can think of and can't find out how to change it
permanently. Is my only option to add the chown/chmod commands to the
boot scripts?
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