Hi again Peter!

Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart" but I
still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib' file
does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning
of < '/bin/lib' file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but
/lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do.

Kind Greetings,
Mats

PPS Text changes when sent DDS

* should be an apostrophe like before /bin


2014-10-20 19:28 GMT+02:00, Mats Olsson <plan9....@gmail.com>:
> Hi again Peter!
>
> Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart" but I
> still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib* file
> does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning
> of < '/bin/lib' file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but
> /lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do.
>
> Kind Greetings,
> Mats
>
> PS Typo corrected DS
>
> 2014-10-20 19:25 GMT+02:00, Mats Olsson <plan9....@gmail.com>:
>> Hi again Peter!
>>
>> Thanks for your patience. I did "chmod +x /path to/riostart but I
>> still get the error message that follows: lib/script '/bin/lib* file
>> does not exist . Since the script is in /lib I don't get the meaning
>> of < '/bin/lib* file does not exist>. Well /bin/lib doesn't exist but
>> /lib/script does. Would greatly appreciate a hint about what to do.
>>
>> Kind Greetings,
>> Mats
>>
>> 2014-10-20 13:34 GMT+02:00, Steve Simon <st...@quintile.net>:
>>> Under plan9 the user who boots a machine has rights to its filesystem,
>>> so unless you are accessing a remote plan9 file server which is running
>>> an auth server I doubt your problems are to do with administration
>>> rights.
>>>
>>> Somtimes plan9 will produce slightly misleading error messages,
>>> permission
>>> denied might be saying the OS will not allow you to do what you wanted
>>> because it doesn't make sense.
>>>
>>> What I suspect is that you didn't chmod your startup (riostart) script
>>> to make it executable?
>>>
>>> If this isn't the problem can you cut and paste the exact command that
>>> produced
>>> the permission denied error?
>>>
>>> I have attached my startup script for interest, it lives in my
>>> $home/bin/rc/startup
>>> (other script names are available).
>>>
>>> -Steve
>>
>

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