On Thu, Dec 19, 2002 at 11:18:24AM -0500, Mikhail Teterin wrote:
>Khmmm, I'm fairly certain, I was not even asked this question.
>Probably, as I said, because the registry already had the Cygwin keys
>left from the previous installation, which was made by a user without
>the admin privileges. Perh
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It happened because you chose to install for "Just Me" instead of "All Users".
Now you know what that means. "Just Me" is really not a good option in
general. It should only be used by those that don't have permission to
write into the HKLM registry subtree.
Larry
At 09:25 PM 12/18/2002, Mik
> Yes, it does. The trouble is that these are *user* mounts. This means
> that another user will not see these mounts.
You are right! But why did it happen? I just did a complete reinstall of
Cygwin... Is it because it was previously installed by a non-admin user
and some registry setting were l
only have system mounts. If you see user mounts from that shell,
run "umount -u 'mount_point'" for each user mount_point.
Igor
> > Larry
>
> > Original Message:
> > -
> > From: Mikhail Teterin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Date
8 Dec 2002 18:25:34 -0500 (EST)
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: /etc/inetd.conf: No such file or directory
>
>
> Hi!
>
> I'm struggling with the fresh install of CygWin on two machines.
>
> If I install the inetd as a service, it logs the following at startup
&
riginal Message:
-
From: Mikhail Teterin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 2002 18:25:34 -0500 (EST)
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: /etc/inetd.conf: No such file or directory
Hi!
I'm struggling with the fresh install of CygWin on two machines.
If I install the inetd as a service, i
Hi!
I'm struggling with the fresh install of CygWin on two machines.
If I install the inetd as a service, it logs the following at startup
time:
/etc/inetd.conf: No such file or directory.
rejecting all connections afterwards.
However, the file most certainly IS present, a
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