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 >> >