On Fri, 2008-08-22 at 19:31 +0200, Tim Niemeyer wrote:
Yes but the file permission on /dev/kvm is wrong for this group thing to
work!
The group assignment is handled by udev:
$ rgrep kvm /etc/udev/
/etc/udev/rules.d/91-permissions.rules:KERNEL==kvm,
GROUP=kvm
Hallo Jan,
* Jan Lübbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] [23-08-08 12:13]:
On Fri, 2008-08-22 at 19:31 +0200, Tim Niemeyer wrote:
Yes but the file permission on /dev/kvm is wrong for this group thing to
work!
The group assignment is handled by udev:
$ rgrep kvm /etc/udev/
Yes but the file permission on /dev/kvm is wrong for this group thing to
work!
Tim Niemeyer
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On Thu, 2008-07-31 at 10:19 +0900, Miles Bader wrote:
Package: kvm
Version: 71+dfsg-1
Severity: wishlist
It would be nice if there was a standard way for users to get write
access to /dev/kvm, without running kvm itself as root.
The typical debian method, I guess would be to create a
Jan Luebbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The package should create the kvm group automatically. Didn't that work
on your system?
Hmm, didn't seem to -- I did grep kvm /etc/group and didn't see any
matches. Also when I did ls -l /dev/kvm initially, the owner/group
were listed as root/root.
-Miles
On Thu, Jul 31, 2008 at 2:02 PM, Miles Bader [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jan Luebbe [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The package should create the kvm group automatically. Didn't that work
on your system?
Hmm, didn't seem to -- I did grep kvm /etc/group and didn't see any
matches. Also when I did ls
Package: kvm
Version: 71+dfsg-1
Severity: wishlist
It would be nice if there was a standard way for users to get write
access to /dev/kvm, without running kvm itself as root.
The typical debian method, I guess would be to create a kvm group and
use that group for /dev/kvm. Then one could give
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