Finally got it to work. Thanks a lot everyone.
On 8/30/06, Mark Moellering <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Did you ever get this working? If not, I can give you my setup...
Mark Moellering
On Monday 28 August 2006 10:52 pm, Viswas Nair wrote:
> didn't help :(
>
> On 8/28/06, ajm <[EMAIL PROTECTED
Viswas Nair wrote:
> I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom and have
> been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
> 1) Added user to the 4th field (options) in /etc/fstab
> 2) Added vfs.usermount=1 to sysctl.conf
> 3) Created a group called optical and ad
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 08:11:16PM +0530, Viswas Nair wrote:
> I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom
and
have
> been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
> 1) Added user to the 4th field (options) in /etc/fstab
> 2) Added vfs.usermount=1 to sysctl.co
On 8/27/06, Viswas Nair <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom and have
been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
1) Added user to the 4th field (options) in /etc/fstab
2) Added vfs.usermount=1 to sysctl.conf
3) Created a gro
didn't help :(
On 8/28/06, ajm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 08:11:16PM +0530, Viswas Nair wrote:
> I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom and
have
> been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
> 1) Added user to the 4th field (opti
On Sun, Aug 27, 2006 at 08:11:16PM +0530, Viswas Nair wrote:
> I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom and have
> been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
> 1) Added user to the 4th field (options) in /etc/fstab
> 2) Added vfs.usermount=1 to sysctl.conf
I have been trying to figure out how to give users to mount CD rom and have
been largely unsuccessful. Here are a few things I tried:
1) Added user to the 4th field (options) in /etc/fstab
2) Added vfs.usermount=1 to sysctl.conf
3) Created a group called optical and added the root and alpha to it
/public_html/
How do I ensure my user can copy files from gui (gnome) to this
folder. Im told I dont have permission to copy to this folder.
Also apache tells me I dont have permission when I change the
DocumentRoot to point to /home/user/public_html/
Just not sure how to go about giving a user
to go about giving a user permissions on files/
folders I want them to be able to edit. Any pointers?
Thanks
Eoghan
the default permission for apache assuming you are using apache22 is 755,
changing it to 777 will have security repercusions, why not add that user to
group that owns/runs apache o
I ensure my user can copy files from gui (gnome) to this
folder. Im told I dont have permission to copy to this folder.
Also apache tells me I dont have permission when I change the
DocumentRoot to point to /home/user/public_html/
Just not sure how to go about giving a user permissions on files
On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 10:37 am, Nicole wrote:
> An example of how spliting BSD into BSD server and BSD desktop could be a
> benefit.
Hrmmm.
/stand/sysinstall
/stand/desktopinstall
Jacob RhodenPhone: +61 3 8344 4478
ITS DivisionEmail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Melbourne U
An example of how spliting BSD into BSD server and BSD desktop could be a
benefit.
Nicole
On 21-Oct-03 My Homeland Security Spies reported that Terry Lambert said:
> carmoda wrote:
>> ~sigh~
>>
>> seems like an awful lot of stuffing around for something that a
>> user/developer should be a
carmoda wrote:
> ~sigh~
>
> seems like an awful lot of stuffing around for something that a
> user/developer should be able to access by default *in my opinion*. so
> far i have about 30% of functionality of my previous W2K system after
> several times the time required for setup. [as a workstatio
Hi,
On Mon, 2003-10-20 at 16:06, carmoda wrote:
> ~sigh~
>
> seems like an awful lot of stuffing around for something that a
> user/developer should be able to access by default *in my opinion*. so
> far i have about 30% of functionality of my previous W2K system after
> several times the time
~sigh~
seems like an awful lot of stuffing around for something that a
user/developer should be able to access by default *in my opinion*. so
far i have about 30% of functionality of my previous W2K system after
several times the time required for setup. [as a workstation]
FreeBSD may be 'free
Please check out the FreeBSD FAQ:
9.22. How do I let ordinary users mount floppies,
CDROMs and other removable media?
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/faq/disks.html#USER-FLOPPYMOUNT
Pete
--- Anthony Carmody <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have been having a trouble get
Hi,
I have been having a trouble getting various things to work on my new
5.1 workstation with gnome 2.x.
tonight i was attemtping to get 'gtoaster' [cd buring s/w] working as i
couldnt see any drives, and when i tried adding them i encountered a few
errors muttering about permissions. so i lo
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