>>How about the actual database files? Do all the files have appropriate ownership and write privileges to allow MySQL to modify those tables?<<

Yes, if I'm reading your question correctly.

I also just tried something - I redid ALL the file permissions on the server - first I set *everything* to 777, and then changed them back so files were 644 and folders were 755 (just to be sure I didn't miss anything when I checked the first few times :) ) so now everything is 100% as it should be - and I still can't edit/create anything.

For the record, the host has also rebuilt Apache for me as well, hoping that would fix the issue. It didn't.

I *can* say that I upgraded to 2.6.1 to see if that would fix the issue (originally it was running 2.5.1 when this started happening), but I've noticed that some of the other people that are reporting this happening have said it starts when they upgrade - to 2.6 is what most are saying (but mine was happening at 2.5, so I don't follow in that line, I guess). However, I'm wondering if it's possible that something in 2.6 is conflicting with the other test installations I've done. I know it sounds insane, but I'm starting to wonder if I completely delete all the files, and re-upload 2.5, and put back in the 2.5 database, if that might work. For my tests, I still have the current 2.6 running - but I put the new "test" installations in other subfolders.

It's totally bizarre to think that might solve the problem, but I seriously have tried everything I can think of, and things people have suggested through google searched, et al...

~Shelly
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