oXid wrote:
Hello Arek,
Wednesday, April 7, 2004, 2:42:26 PM, you wrote:
AC On Wed, 7 Apr 2004, oXid wrote:
Hello,
I did to all my / chmod 777... i just wanted to test somthing, but it
was a bad idea :(
Now, i can't login under SU. The account is in wheel
group...everything is fine, but
Thanks. But i don't have another choise.
Becose my SU utility doesn't work :(
I wrote that in my first mail.
Maybe anyone coud help me with fixing my SU?
Is itb possible to reinstall su, but only SU, not all system?
try /usr/src/usr.bin/su if you installed the source as well
make make install in
I can enter as root from console. But i can't enter as root, from ssh.
I have to enter as some user from whell then SU and etc...
Don't login as root over a remote conection (ssh). It's disabled by
default. The proper way is to login as a user who is in the wheel group
and then su to root.
On Wed, Apr 07, 2004 at 02:07:42PM +0400, oXid wrote:
Becose my SU utility doesn't work :(
I wrote that in my first mail.
Maybe anyone coud help me with fixing my SU?
Is itb possible to reinstall su, but only SU, not all system?
Or could someone tell me what files are working with su...maybe
oXid wrote:
Thanks. But i don't have another choise.
Becose my SU utility doesn't work :(
I wrote that in my first mail.
OK, the following lines confused me:
I can enter as root from console. But i can't enter as root, from ssh.
I have to enter as some user from whell then SU and etc...
I
At 2004-04-07T09:12:25Z, oXid [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I did to all my / chmod 777... i just wanted to test somthing, but it was
a bad idea :(
Wait - later posts indicate that /usr/bin/su had bad permissions. Did you
*recursively* chmod your whole filesystem?
--
Kirk Strauser
94 outdated
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 07:41:53PM +0200, Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login as root, all I get in the prompt is a % sign. My
normal user shell is tcsh and the prompt looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/home/eric(29): but this is not kept when I su -m.
How can I change this?
Have you
Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login as root, all I get in the prompt is a % sign. My
normal user shell is tcsh and the prompt looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/home/eric(29): but this is not kept when I su -m.
How can I change this?
Thanks,
Eric
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 07:41:53PM +0200, Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login as root, all I get in the prompt is a % sign. My
normal user shell is tcsh and the prompt looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/home/eric(29): but this is not kept when I su -m.
How can I change this?
Look in
Jez Hancock wrote:
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 07:41:53PM +0200, Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login as root, all I get in the prompt is a % sign. My
normal user shell is tcsh and the prompt looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/home/eric(29): but this is not kept when I su -m.
How can I change
conditional gubbins
around the prompt statement in the user's cshrc?
Ed
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jez Hancock
Sent: 20 March 2004 18:23
To: Eric Yellin
Cc: freeBSD
Subject: Re: problem with su
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 07:41
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 06:46:53PM -, Edmund Craske wrote:
This isn't right, when using the -m flag su uses your current
environment, keeping your shell, prompt etc the same as in your
own account. All I can think of is that it executes something
when it opens the new shell which changes
Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login as root, all I get in the prompt is a % sign. My
normal user shell is tcsh and the prompt looks like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/home/eric(29): but this is not kept when I su -m.
How can I change this?
Thanks,
Eric
Seems a tad unusual. Don't know if I can
Edmund Craske wrote:
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jez Hancock
Sent: 20 March 2004 18:23
To: Eric Yellin
Cc: freeBSD
Subject: Re: problem with su
On Sat, Mar 20, 2004 at 07:41:53PM +0200, Eric Yellin wrote:
When I su -m and login
14 matches
Mail list logo