Casper.Dik at Sun.COM wrote: >> Finally, it is fixed by "chmod 777 /". >> > > The proper mode for "/" is 755. > > Using 777 disables any filesystem security you had. > > Thanks! 755 does work. It seems file-roller's bad behavior causes the problem. But I need to isolated the operations that lead the change. Do you know how to check the access rights setting of "/"? "ls -l" just lists files under "/", but not "/" itself.
Thanks, Harry