On Thu, 4 Jan 2007 21:04:15 -0800
"Joshua Schmidlkofer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey, a customer on a hosted server did this today:
>
> sudo chown -R lighttpd /
>
> --
>
> You can imagine that things are a little borked. How do you fix this
> with Gentoo?
> > Sincerely,
> Joshua
I think
I would think a quick fix (by no means a FULL fix) would be to re-emerge
sys-apps/baselayout. That should at least get your init scrips, and important
configs back to the right permissions. I've never actually tried that however,
so take it with a grain of salt.
I would agree with most people
> -Original Message-
> From: Joshua Schmidlkofer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 05 January 2007 05:04
> To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [gentoo-user] Fix file system permissions
>
>
> Hey, a customer on a hosted server did this today:
>
> sudo chown -R
On Thu, 2007-01-04 at 21:04 -0800, Joshua Schmidlkofer wrote:
> Hey, a customer on a hosted server did this today:
>
> sudo chown -R lighttpd /
*heh heh*
apart from saying the mean (but deserved) restore from backup :) maybe
you could just `chown -R root /`
that would put you in a better state
On Thu, 2007-01-04 at 21:04 -0800, Joshua Schmidlkofer wrote:
> You can imagine that things are a little borked. How do you fix this
> with Gentoo?
Well, do you have any backups of the system to work with? Cause if not,
your next easiest approach might be to invent a time machine... But
serious
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