On Sun, Mar 12, 2000 at 06:20:30PM -0500, Bob Hilliard wrote:
> The Doctor What <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > but not if I try to sudo to a non-root id (this is as root, note the #):
> > bash-2.04# sudo -u man bash
> > sudo: unable to exec /bin/bash: Permission denied
>
> This doesn't af
* Bob Hilliard ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [000313 07:44]:
> The Doctor What <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > but not if I try to sudo to a non-root id (this is as root, note the #):
> > bash-2.04# sudo -u man bash
> > sudo: unable to exec /bin/bash: Permission denied
>
> This doesn't affect your m
The Doctor What <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> but not if I try to sudo to a non-root id (this is as root, note the #):
> bash-2.04# sudo -u man bash
> sudo: unable to exec /bin/bash: Permission denied
This doesn't affect your main question, but you are using the
wrong syntax for sudo. The -
Just so you know, I've been searching *everywhere* for info on this and
it's driving me nuts!
I've been following debian unstable for a while. Currently that's
'woody'. I reciently upgraded my kernel from on old 2.3.3x (35 I
think) to 2.3.49, complete with devfs configured.
Since then, if I run
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