* Christian Hammers | On 2005-02-09 Gilbert Laycock wrote: | > If you try to start/restart mysql-server as root, and root has TMPDIR | > set to something not writable by the mysql user (eg if you are using | > libpam-tmpdir, so TMPDIR is typically /tmp/user/0 during a login | > session), then it fails to restart - you get errors like this: | | Hm, generally spoken, environment variables exists for a reason, if you | start a program with such a one, you want it to use it so I can't blame | MySQL. | | On the other hand, libpam-tmpdir seems to be a nice idea. | | Do you have a suggestion how to solve this problem? Root often starts | services that change their uids shortly after running i.e. do not | use "su" or "sudo" which would give them the right env variables. | | I Cc the libpam-tmpdir maintainer ;)
There's not much to do about it -- ideally, services should start a new session (which would give them a new TMPDIR) and not just change uids. (From the PoV of a PAM maintainer at least. :) However, this can in practice be a bit icky, so I would just add something like [ -w "$TMPDIR" ] || { TMPDIR="/tmp"; export TMPDIR } to the init script. This should probably be considered good practice for daemons which change their UID, I think. I'm Cc-ing debian-devel to see if anybody has any better suggestions; Mail-Followup-To set there. -- Tollef Fog Heen ,''`. UNIX is user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are : :' : `. `' `- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]