At 05:00 PM 6/4/01 -0500, Nichole Bialczyk wrote:
>The difference is that in Unix, I have admin permissions and the web
>server is anyuser. I thought that my making everything 777, it would
>solve it. I'm not as familiar with Unix as I'd like to be. I know how to
>do ACL permissions in afs, but I don't know Unix.
Well the usual issue with web scripts on AFS is that you need a token to
write to a directory and a CGI process won't have one unless it uses a
srvtab file. AFS users who want to write cron jobs learn that one real
fast. Unix file permissions don't make hardly any difference on AFS.
But you indicated that you couldn't write to /tmp. That's bizarre, because
/tmp isn't part of AFS, at least not on one I've seen.
I think we're going to need more help. You might also need to ask the
info-afs list.
--
Peter Scott
Pacific Systems Design Technologies
http://www.perldebugged.com