On 08/17/08 15:59, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 08/16/08 12:57, Patrick Wiseman wrote:
Hello:
It seems every time xorg is updated it clobbers my Nvidia driver and,
all of a sudden, those cool GLX screen savers, not to mention Google
Earth (a mission-critical application!) don't work. If I use
nvidia-installer to UNinstall the drivers, it tells me
'/usr/lib/xorg/modules/extensions/libglx.so is not a symbolic link',
whereas, right after installing the nvidia drivers, it IS. So, what
I'm wondering is whether there's any way to protect a symbolic link
from being overwritten. Ordinarily, if I want to protect a file, I'll
make it read- or read-and-execute-only, but a symbolic link is always
'lrwxrwxrwx' and 'chmod 555 link' just changes the permissions on the
underlying file. Perhaps that will protect the link from being
replaced with a file, but I'm not confident! A hack solution would be
simply to rename the underlying file to the link name and make THAT
unwritable, but I think that might confuse the nvidia installer.
Any suggestions will be welcome.
After any xorg update, I go into /usr/lib/xorg/modules/extensions and
manually symlink the nvidia libglx.so.XXX.YY.ZZ to libglx.so.
Good point. But you have stated this at least 6 times in the last couple
of years. People must forget.
People use so many different terms and ways of phrasing the same
problem that Googling can sometimes be a futile exercise.
Especially if you are a n00b or casual user.
--
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA USA
"Do not bite at the bait of pleasure till you know there is no
hook beneath it." -- Thomas Jefferson
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