Ken Hu writes:
I've run into the following problem and I found the answer in the manual.
But I am sure that I have set -f parameter in my inetd.conf file.
So , any idea why this still occurs ?
Because you're running on a version of Linux where inetd incorrectly
sets $HOME for the processes
Dear All :
I've run into the following problem and I found the answer in the manual.
But I am sure that I have set -f parameter in my inetd.conf file.
So , any idea why this still occurs ?
Thanks in advance
==
If you seem to be connecting