On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 10:13:51AM +0100, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
> Leo Famulari skribis:
>
> > After rebooting, I found that my user's numerical ID had changed, so I
> > no longer owned any of my files. Not being able to read ~/.ssh means you
> > can't log in remotely.
> >
> > Additionally, sever
Leo Famulari skribis:
> After rebooting, I found that my user's numerical ID had changed, so I
> no longer owned any of my files. Not being able to read ~/.ssh means you
> can't log in remotely.
>
> Additionally, several of root's "dotfiles" had been replaced with their
> default versions, erasin
Hi Leo,
Leo Famulari skribis:
> After rebooting, I found that my user's numerical ID had changed, so I
> no longer owned any of my files. Not being able to read ~/.ssh means you
> can't log in remotely.
>
> Additionally, several of root's "dotfiles" had been replaced with their
> default version