Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- From: upen <upendra.gandhi@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2010 12:20:55 -0600
chmod 1777 /tmp
This is perfect. I was able to run crontab -e as a non root user and
this change is persistent after reboot as well.
Thanks guys. Good day.
On 12/21/10, upen <upendra.gandhi@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
You probably also need to fix the SELinux attributes, running a
'restorecon -rv /tmp' should do it.
And no SELinux is not enabled on my system, so I don't think I will
need to run restorecon in this case, or do I ?
--
--
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
- References:
- /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- From: upen
- Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- From: Jonathan S Billings
- Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- From: upen
- Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- From: upen
- /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- Prev by Date: Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- Next by Date: Is Windows XP a multi-user operating system?
- Previous by thread: Re: /tmp perms and crontab -e as a user on Santiago
- Next by thread: Is Windows XP a multi-user operating system?
- Index(es):