Le tridi 3 nivôse, an CCXXV, Xen a écrit :
> I think my point was more that I didn't know how to chgrp, but I found I
> needed to add myself to www-data first before I could chgrp to it.
Just a basic sanity check:
If your web server is running as www-data, then it is better if the
files do NOT be
On Fri, Dec 23, 2016 at 01:17:23AM +0100, Xen wrote:
> Life becomes a whole lot easier if you can do stuff with your regular
> user, which is why I am putting stuff in my user home directory in the
> first place, instead of some central location.
Making your life easier should NOT be your #1 pri
Hi Xen,
On Thu, Dec 22, 2016 at 06:24:59PM +0100, Xen wrote:
> I am trying to get a webserver to run under my regular user, or at
> least to have the website's files under control of my regular user,
> but the webserver runs as www-data.
You've been shown how to put yourself in the www-data group
Hi,
sorry for this trivial question, but I really tried to find an answer on
the web without any result.
This is the issue: on a computer at home (shared among relatives, each
with his/her own account), the first user that logs in after boot locks
the cdrom drive, and any other user that logs in
Hi,
Nimrod wrote:
> the first user that logs in after boot locks the cdrom
> drive, and any other user that logs in can't eject the cdrom: only the first
> user can eject it.
Are you sure that it is the existence of the a user's ACL permission
which prevents the other's from ejecting and not thei
Le 23/12/2016 à 18:54, Nimrod a écrit :
This is the issue: on a computer at home (shared among relatives, each
with his/her own account), the first user that logs in after boot locks
the cdrom drive, and any other user that logs in can't eject the cdrom:
only the first user can eject it.
I sus
Thanks for your kind answer, below is mine.
On Fri, 2016-12-23 at 20:30 +0100, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Nimrod wrote:
> > the first user that logs in after boot locks the cdrom
> > drive, and any other user that logs in can't eject the cdrom: only the first
> > user can eject it.
>
> Are
Dear Folks,
I am running Debian stretch on a pc with an AMD FX 8350 chip and a
sabertooth FX 990 motherboard.
I am interested to check a few things are working as they would be expected
to here.
I ran cat /proc/cpuinfo
and got
processor : 7
vendor_id : AuthenticAMD
cpu family : 21
model : 2
m
On Fri, 2016-12-23 at 20:54 +0100, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 23/12/2016 à 18:54, Nimrod a écrit :
> >
> > This is the issue: on a computer at home (shared among relatives, each
> > with his/her own account), the first user that logs in after boot locks
> > the cdrom drive, and any other user tha
Hi,
Nimrod wrote:
> I see a "+" in your permission. What is that, and how could I get it too?
It indicates that there is a non-trivial ACL and that it is worth to run
program getfacl to see all permissions.
$ getfacl /dev/sr0
getfacl: Removing leading '/' from absolute path names
# fil
On Fri, 2016-12-23 at 23:16 +0100, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Nimrod wrote:
> > I see a "+" in your permission. What is that, and how could I get it
> > too?
>
> It indicates that there is a non-trivial ACL and that it is worth to run
> program getfacl to see all permissions.
>
> $
On 24/12/16 09:45, Michael Fothergill wrote:
Suggestions on performance testing the FX 8350 chip on this install are
welcome.
For an open source multithreaded CPU load with a handy benchmark mode,
install povray, then run:
povray -benchmark
and compare the resulting time in seconds with:
ht
Hi all,
Couple days ago I was trying to general package update by simply "Mark
All Upgrades" and "Apply" from the Synaptic package manager as I usually do.
I noticed the audacious was up-gradable so I simply marked all upgrades
and tried to install. However I also noticed by doing this it will
re
Am 23.12.2016 um 18:54 schrieb Nimrod:
> Hi,
>
> sorry for this trivial question, but I really tried to find an answer on
> the web without any result.
>
> This is the issue: on a computer at home (shared among relatives, each
> with his/her own account), the first user that logs in after boot lo
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