On Sat, Jun 08, 2002 at 07:14:03PM +0200, Jörg Johannes wrote: | > Hm. | > | > If | > ./col2row.sh | > gives "Keine Berechtigung", but this one works: | > sh ./col2row.sh | > | > then you most likely put the script on a filesystem that has been | > mounted with the "noexec" attribute. Sometimes people mount /tmp this | > way. Another test of this would be to copy /bin/ls to the same location | > and trying "./ls". | > | > (Note that mounting a filesystem with noexec does nothing for security, | > as it is easily overcome) | > | > Using /bin/sh (or /bin/ksh or /bin/bash) shouldn't really matter here; | > although I have only really tested it with bash (my /bin/sh is a symlink | > to /bin/bash). | | Hello Karl | | I can't try out at the moment (I'm not at my own box now), but a "noexec" | mounted filesystem should not be the cause for this issue. I could run the perl | and python scripts just this way. Any other idea?
What does "Keine Berechtigung" mean? Is it literally "Permission Denied"? If so, try chmod u+x ./col2row.sh and run it again. Also make sure the script starts with a correct #! line. -D -- For society, it's probably a good thing that engineers value function over appearance. For example, you wouldn't want engineers to build nuclear power plants that only _look_ like they would keep all the radiation inside. (Scott Adams - The Dilbert principle) GnuPG key : http://dman.ddts.net/~dman/public_key.gpg
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