Hi,
I'm not sure why that's happening. ps just prints what the kernel
decides the oomadj is, it doesn't control it.
=> the problem:
On Wed, 3 Nov 2021 at 22:34, Die Optimisten mailto:inf...@die-optimisten.net>> wrote:
Hi!
how can a subprocess get be
Hi
More and more debian-packages don't have actual changelogs any more
aptitude: failed to download the changelog of linux-image-3.2.0.4-amd64
Don't know if that is caused by debian.org or the kernel-maintainers...
Please correct this!
thank you
Andrew
1-19 21:50, Julien Cristau wrote:
Ah, right. That is the "protected symlinks" hardening feature.
Cheers,
Julien
On January 19, 2016 9:36:50 PM CET, Die Optimisten
wrote:
On 2016-01-19 20:06, Julien Cristau wrote:
On Tue, Jan 19, 2016 at 19:44:26 +0100, Die Optimisten wrote:
On 2016-01-19 20:06, Julien Cristau wrote:
On Tue, Jan 19, 2016 at 19:44:26 +0100, Die Optimisten wrote:
Hi
I#m using/normal Debian, without virtualization, etc/
Why do I have access as user, but not as root
google for nfs root squash.
Cheers,
Julien
Hi Julien,
Its local, without NFS
Hi
I#m using normal Debian, without virtualization, etc
Why do I have access as user, but not as root
tmp is tmpfs
softlink as User:
/tmp/X$ ln -s /mnt/A4/TmpTmp-Anschauen/RRÖ/ RR # as User
root@PcDach:/tmp/X# dir RR/ # as Root
ls: cannot access RR/: Permission denied
root@PcDach:/tm
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