(snip) > But when I enter exactly the same command into a terminal window on the > same machine but provided by an Xpra session, the results are quite > different and surprising: (snip)
> Note that all my usual mounts are read-only, not read-write, and there > are strange new mount points not seen before. The read-only attribute > interferes with the normal operation of many standard applications. The > disk /dev/sda on the machine running the Xpra is healthy. I can repeat > the direct inquiry via ssh shown first and get the same results any time > *after* seeing the anomalous report coming through Xpra. > > I am mystified. Any proposed explanations and/or remedies for this > situation (even me-too reports) would be most welcome. Thanks! - Philip In order to better isolate individual sessions from the rest of the system, we use the system-wide proxy server to register them as proper systemd sessions. This includes setting "ProtectSystem" to "strict", for more details see: http://lists.devloop.org.uk/pipermail/shifter-users/2017-August/001990.html Cheers Antoine _______________________________________________ shifter-users mailing list shifter-users@lists.devloop.org.uk http://lists.devloop.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/shifter-users