That's what I thought, but it doesn't work.  So there's nothing wrong
with what I'm doing?  Perhaps I should file a bug report...


Centos 5.5, Puppet 2.6:


# ls -ld /etc/puppet
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 21 Jul 29 17:56 /etc/puppet -> /usr/local/etc/
puppet
# ls -ld /var/lib/puppet
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 36 Jul 29 17:56 /var/lib/puppet -> /usr/local/
etc/puppet/var/lib/puppet


# puppetmasterd --no-manage_internal_file_permissions


# ls -ld /etc/puppet
drwxr-xr-x 4 root root 4096 Jul 29 17:57 /etc/puppet
# ls -ld /var/lib/puppet
drwxr-xr-x 12 root root 4096 Jul 29 17:57 /var/lib/puppet





On Jul 29, 3:26 am, Alan Barrett <a...@cequrux.com> wrote:
> On Wed, 28 Jul 2010, Tom wrote:
> > "Note that you can set =??manage_internal_file_permissions=?? to false to
> > disable this behaviour."
>
> > So that's what I was trying to do - use
> > "manage_internal_file_permissions" to disable it.  But that doesn't
> > seem to work either, does it?  You can't use this from the command
> > line, can you?
>
> The command-line equivalent would be
> "--no-manage_internal_file_permissions".
> Be careful with the hyphens and underlines.
>
> --apb (Alan Barrett)

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